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Dead Bodies

  • 2003
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 28 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,0/10
1184
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Dead Bodies (2003)
Schwarze KomödieDramaHorrorKomödie

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe return of a vengeful ex-girlfriend sets into motion a series of gruesome events for a hapless Irish bachelor in director Robert Quinn's grim black comedy.The return of a vengeful ex-girlfriend sets into motion a series of gruesome events for a hapless Irish bachelor in director Robert Quinn's grim black comedy.The return of a vengeful ex-girlfriend sets into motion a series of gruesome events for a hapless Irish bachelor in director Robert Quinn's grim black comedy.

  • Regie
    • Robert Quinn
  • Drehbuch
    • Derek Landy
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Andrew Scott
    • Katy Davis
    • Eamonn Owens
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,0/10
    1184
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Robert Quinn
    • Drehbuch
      • Derek Landy
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Andrew Scott
      • Katy Davis
      • Eamonn Owens
    • 11Benutzerrezensionen
    • 6Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 3 Gewinne & 4 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos6

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    Topbesetzung27

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    Andrew Scott
    Andrew Scott
    • Tommy McGann
    Katy Davis
    Katy Davis
    • Jean Goodman
    Eamonn Owens
    Eamonn Owens
    • Billy
    Darren Healy
    • Noel
    Kelly Reilly
    Kelly Reilly
    • Viv McCormack
    Jer O'Leary
    Jer O'Leary
    • Mr. O'Leary
    Des Nealon
    • Mr. Kearns
    Gerard McSorley
    Gerard McSorley
    • Gordon Ellis
    • (as Gerard Mcsorley)
    Liz Quinn
    • Receptionist in Gym
    Brendan O'Sullivan
    • Police Officer
    Sean McGinley
    Sean McGinley
    • Detective Inspector Wheeler
    • (as Seán Mcginley)
    Frank Coughlan
    • Desk Sergeant
    Sarah Jane Drummey
    • Helen
    • (as Sarah-Jane Drummey)
    Alan Robinson
    • Police Officer in Coffee Shop
    Breffni Winston
    • Police Officer in Coffee Shop
    • (as Breffni Whiston)
    Mary Owens
    • Woman Walking Dog
    Paraic Breathnach
    • Detective Gray
    • (as Páraic Breathnach)
    Jennifer Young
    • Cathleen Ellis
    • Regie
      • Robert Quinn
    • Drehbuch
      • Derek Landy
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen11

    6,01.1K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    BackstageInc

    Baby steps to what might yet opens doors to Irish film

    The film is a nice little cleverly written film, but the direction adds a very strong amateur feel to it. If Hollywood got there hands on the idea it might have been a world wide success but alas the Irish critics, if they have the right to be even called that have rallied behind him, making him sound like a prodigy but they are very over rated judgements. Whether or not he'll get any better at directing than this is yet very uncertain.

    Some of the cast are really good others are born stage actors and should remain so.... still though with the Irish film board pumping out these low budget films it's no wonder the Irish film industry is light years behind everyone else. Out with the old and in with the new I say.. But Robert Quinn is a start... so mixed views.
    5jmbovan-47-160173

    Adequate but cliched film.

    The main issue keeping this film from being better than what is here is the script. Not enough is allowed for development of the story to make this truly something to entice. Instead, the film follows plots and tropes of other mystery and thriller films and books. Acting us all decent, and that is what keeps the film watchable.
    7mmnewton

    well there's not many Irish films around...

    Late night on BBC1, was on my way to bed but curiosity piqued at a contemporary-set Irish film so I stayed to watch for a few minutes and then stayed to the end. I have to admit that the main attraction was the only English actress, Kelly Reilly, who is stunning to look at.

    This is billed as a black comedy, which is one of the hardest things to pull off. It should be the perfect blend of horror and horrible laughs so that in the end you don't know why you're laughing - for me Martin Scorsese's After Hours (1985) is the best example. Dead Bodies is more black than comedy but the plot rattles along and spirals down towards further blackness. I didn't spot the final twists in the tale as some other posters here did so I was suitably surprised.

    As a snapshot of the Irish film industry in 2003, it all seems rather worthy; it doesn't look like they spent too much on the making of it so it had a chance to make its money back. The script could've been a whole lot sharper but the acting was on the whole pretty good. I'm glad I watched it, flaws and all, tho I don't think I learnt much about Ireland today, especially their policing methods!
    greenbuff

    Good director, poor script

    Robert Quinn shows he's got the goods but needs to exercise better judgment when deciding what scripts to go with - You don't get too many shots. Well directed but where does one draw the line? - director has to take some credit for story choices and character motivation which in this instance was non existent.

    Pauper's "Shallow Grave" this. Derek Landy had the very good fortune to see what passes in most instances for a first draft make it to the screen. One can only pray "Boy Eats Girl" is better for everyone's sake. Logic is non existent and characters are all unsympathetic and unlikeable, as evidenced by audiences in all media staying away in droves and film going down like a lead balloon internationally.
    7johnnyboyz

    Rather than die on arrival; Dead Bodies twists, turns and provides more than its fair share of psychological warfare and complications of a moral nature.

    When it comes to those eerie and uncanny little crime films, the sorts that revolve around characters that are bordering on scum and inhabit equally scummy surroundings, and additionally carry that wavering and bleak feel thanks to some pretty grotty cinematography and some very black comedy; Dead Bodies is the sort of film Paul McGuigan wishes he could make. Alas, the maddening and sporadic Gangster No. 1 as well as the equally all over the shop, but interesting exercise in surrealism mixed with realism, effort entitled The Acid House are the only ones of his we've got to go on so far. Dead Bodies is Robert Quinn's piece based on a Derek Landy script, a film that straddles the line between psychological horror and neo-noir; intermingling elements of crime and terror with themes linked to morality and unnatural, obsessive disorders.

    McGuigan's British based crime efforts carry that wavy and distorted feel, like witnessing somebody's nightmare and having front row seats in the process. His films are able to disgust is some areas and amuse in others what with their outlandish and all-over-the-place approach. They carry a very dream-like sensibility despite being grounded in a very realistic, down-trodden, grimy looking world – the real world with as much-an emphasis on the horror and the terror of the situations his characters spawn than anything else. Dead Bodies is a film that tackles both some pretty harrowing character driven situations as well as a brief inclusion of a study of a delicate psychological mindset, only here, the film balances both the eccentricity of its characters; the terror of the scenarios they find themselves in and the questions of morality that arise much better.

    Dead Bodies is effective and rather simplistic without ever feeling like manipulative. Its suggestive and knowing tendency to want to hammer home exactly what people are thinking and feeling does not detract from the experience. Early on, we meet Tommy McGann (Scott), a young lad whose girlfriend Jean (Davis) dominates him, his life and the screen whenever she's on for the brief time that she is. The point as to the fact his situation of living in a less-than desirable house; with a job stacking shelves and a partner he doesn't get on with at all well is put across in a distinct manner. As is the manner in which the audience are given distinct permission to dislike Jean what with the bratty, spoilt and expectant attitudes she so clearly possesses. Later on the film will linger, rather obviously, on a police officer's face as suspicions and tensions rise in what is clearly a cheap and easy way to tell the watching audience that our hero is not quite out of trouble just yet.

    But compare this to Gangster No. 1, in which such is the episodic and misguided approach McGuigan applies to the material; that a vital, vital plot point arises when a character is spotted leaving a building by someone else out on a 'random drive' in a scene set several months after the previous one. The feeling isn't as grounded nor fulfilling. Dead Bodies' set up is dominated by Kay Davis' Jean; a would-be femme fatale just itching to pick a fight of some sort but just not really being able to find one. She has lead Tommy jumping through rings; going there, doing this and that without Tommy ever really reacting in the manner he could, principally because he is controlled by her promises of sex. The beginning builds a certain amount of tension because of Tommy's underplayed reaction to what's going on and it culminates in a distinct release when the initial incident happens, and Jean dies.

    If the set up is simple enough then that's one thing, but the pinch of the project is the manner in which Tommy decides to rid Jean of his hands by burying her without informing anyone of her death bar a best friend. Things tighten when it transpires there was a second dead body in the exact same place Tommy buried Jean, with suspicions, denials and general trouble the all round ingredients of the day. It is at this point the film blurs the lines between noir and horror; indeed Tommy inhabits rather-a large, ominous, spooky and even Gothic house which he shares with an elder relative whom inhabits the upper areas of said house. This evokes memories of Hitchcock's 1960 film Psycho and Bates' set up that he has with his mother, and where she's positioned. It is additionally no coincidence this would-be place of horror is the setting for Jean's unfortunate demise.

    The placing of a dead body right in the hands of the hapless, male lead in order for it to act as the initial incident is a classic set up for any noir; from Ulmer's 1945 film Detour right up to a more recent, and more contemporary compared to Dead Bodies, 2006 film entitled Big Nothing. What this film unfolds into, is a twisted; rather unpredictable and quite frightening tale of genre hybridity and mind games told under a palette of distinctly drained visuals. The voice-overs and the treading on the fine line that the lead does for most of the film between right and wrong aid in pushing it into a realm of the neo-noir; if we consider the fact that the lead is, essentially, innocent and his murder charges are unfair then that's one thing, but his attitudes towards Jean initially saw him act without thought and his covering up of her death is the anti-thesis for dropping the murder charges. Dead Bodies is taught; entertaining to watch without ever feeling exploitative and provides a consistent tone for the rather nasty physical and psychological content being explored.

    Handlung

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    • Patzer
      Dates on Garda security camera in one scene show 9 September 2003. In a subsequent scene, the date is 5 September 2003.
    • Zitate

      Jean Goodman: How come you're never around when I need you?

      Tommy McGann: Jean, we've split up.

      Jean Goodman: I needed you last night. And where were you?

      Tommy McGann: I told you, I was at...

      Jean Goodman: You were at a party. Ah, that's great Tommy. And how inconsiderate of me to need you last night. How awful my timing is. What a selfish bitch I am! I come in, and that fucking lizard is roaming around. I've been trapped in the bedroom since I got here.

      Tommy McGann: He's not a lizard, he's a bearded dragon.

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 25. April 2003 (Irland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Irland
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Трупы
    • Drehorte
      • Dublin, County Dublin, Irland
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Bord Scannán na hÉireann / The Irish Film Board
      • Hibernia Films
      • Distinguished Features
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 28 Min.(88 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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