Un adolescente misantropo ottiene uno status di celebrità improvviso e indesiderato dopo essere stato preso in ostaggio da terroristi in cui la sua indifferenza alle loro minacce di ucciderl... Leggi tuttoUn adolescente misantropo ottiene uno status di celebrità improvviso e indesiderato dopo essere stato preso in ostaggio da terroristi in cui la sua indifferenza alle loro minacce di ucciderlo fa notizia.Un adolescente misantropo ottiene uno status di celebrità improvviso e indesiderato dopo essere stato preso in ostaggio da terroristi in cui la sua indifferenza alle loro minacce di ucciderlo fa notizia.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 5 candidature totali
- Milt Morris
- (as Soon Teck Oh)
- Sandy Hooten
- (as Melissa Lechner)
Recensioni in evidenza
Don't let the plot summary fool you into thinking this is some type of thriller with a media slant. The hostage thing is over in the first 3 minutes and any flashbacks are dull and meaningless (except one powerful one). Instead we have a mixed up satire on media and the fade of fame. The plot never makes sense and really loses the point after only a few minutes. The fact that the whole hostage thing is never explained and barely touched on just shows it is nothing but a poor plot device to get to where the makers wanted to be to make their point.
It manages to come across as just an angry youth movie with it's anger not directed anywhere in particular. This causes it to be very loud and with far too much swearing, causing you to start to switch off. The only point that the film manages to make clearly is that no matter who is the 15 minute celeb or news story that night, TV is all the same. Wow! What cutting edge comment!
Dorff is OK but just plain annoying in his videos (that apparently the world love). Witherspoon is vapid, Busey is just loud and annoying and Adams is totally misused. The cast put more effort into saying the F word than anything else. It is very off putting because it is unnecessary I guess they thought the `kids' would dig it.
Overall this is just like the media that it tries to criticise. It is loud, meaningless, lacking substance and totally forgettable physician heal thyself............
Its a pretty cool movie that along with Natural Born Killers was a high profile examination of, at the time, media practices (NBK in a much more extreme way) and the creation of celebrity (regardless of talent or in spite of it).
Its sassy, funny and for sure entertaining :)
In other words, it's mostly like a dozen other films that address this theme, just a little differently. This one's a little more deft at dishing out the satire and irony, despite rocking hard those product placements that films relied on in the 90s, in this case, heineken, which we see too many times to count. Since it was an new emerging director at the time, there's a lot of emphasis on attempts to produce fresh, thoughtful imagery. It's a commentary on the meaninglessness of popular reality tv, which was new then, albeit in the mid-1990s. It's hard to remember in 2021 how new we were to instant-reality-tv fame, and when, despite our addiction to it, we also still seemed to know how tasteless it was, before it became part of our ever-present background via social media. A little of EdTV meets Natural Born Killers, with a pretty and then-promising young Stephen Dorff, and a pretty and cute-as-a-button young Reese Witherspoon.
Kudos for not being afraid to show lower middle-class white Southern California the way it really was and is, without all the California/Los Angeles/Beach cliches that audiences lazily expect. Also kudos for showing the character of Spab as a real life character that he probably should be -- aimless, ambitionless, talentless, but redeemed by innate charisma, gift for gab, and good looks.
This is one of Dorff's better dramatic roles. Witherspoon, on the other hand, was not given much to work with, beyond being the "co-star." Busey, as usual for both he and his father, stole every scene he was in, which wasn't many.
All that being said, I can't completely hate a movie with this great of a soundtrack. The fact that almost a minute of screen time is given over to the band Gwar makes it at least retain some value. I've also noticed that music from the 50's - 70's is thrown into movies at all different times. But the only time you hear 90s music is in 90's era movies. It's almost as though Gen X in their nihilism forgot to leave any lasting mark on culture.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe filmmakers described this movie as a "serio-comedy about terrorism, beer, and talk shows."
- BlooperIn the opening before the gun fight cliff, Wendy and Joe are dirty and disheveled, however during the gun fight flashback they are well groomed and clean.
- Citazioni
Cliff Spab: [to his captors; sarcastic tone] Hi, my name's Rick Forsythe. I live in Silver Pond with my parents George and Edna Forsythe, and my sister Suzanne. I'm president of the debate team, and captain of my baseball team over at Silver Pond High. I have a dog named Rusty, and my hobbies include coin collecting and dry-humping cheerleaders.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe GWAR video seen in the movie follows the credits in its entirety.
- Colonne sonoreJesus Christ Pose
Performed by Soundgarden
Written by Chris Cornell, Matt Cameron (as Matthew D. Cameron), Kim Thayil (as Kim A. Thayil), Ben Shepherd
Courtesy of A&M Records, Inc.
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 63.513 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 44.227 USD
- 22 gen 1995
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 63.513 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 36min(96 min)
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1