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Au-delà du réel

Original title: Altered States
  • 1980
  • 12
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
41K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,422
441
William Hurt in Au-delà du réel (1980)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:04
1 Video
99+ Photos
Body HorrorPsychological HorrorHorrorSci-FiThriller

A psycho-physiologist experiments with drugs and a sensory-deprivation tank and has visions he believes are genetic memories.A psycho-physiologist experiments with drugs and a sensory-deprivation tank and has visions he believes are genetic memories.A psycho-physiologist experiments with drugs and a sensory-deprivation tank and has visions he believes are genetic memories.

  • Director
    • Ken Russell
  • Writer
    • Paddy Chayefsky
  • Stars
    • William Hurt
    • Blair Brown
    • Bob Balaban
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    41K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,422
    441
    • Director
      • Ken Russell
    • Writer
      • Paddy Chayefsky
    • Stars
      • William Hurt
      • Blair Brown
      • Bob Balaban
    • 190User reviews
    • 119Critic reviews
    • 58Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 1 win & 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    Altered States
    Trailer 2:04
    Altered States

    Photos216

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    William Hurt
    William Hurt
    • Eddie Jessup
    Blair Brown
    Blair Brown
    • Emily Jessup
    Bob Balaban
    Bob Balaban
    • Arthur Rosenberg
    Charles Haid
    Charles Haid
    • Mason Parrish
    Thaao Penghlis
    Thaao Penghlis
    • Eccheverria
    Miguel Godreau
    • Primal Man
    Dori Brenner
    • Sylvia Rosenberg
    Peter Brandon
    • Hobart
    Charles White-Eagle
    Charles White-Eagle
    • The Brujo
    Drew Barrymore
    Drew Barrymore
    • Margaret Jessup
    Megan Jeffers
    • Grace Jessup
    Jack Murdock
    Jack Murdock
    • Hector Orteco
    Francis X. McCarthy
    Francis X. McCarthy
    • Obispo
    • (as Frank McCarthy)
    Deborah Baltzell
    • Schizophrenic Patient
    Evan Richards
    Evan Richards
    • Young Rosenberg
    Hap Lawrence
    Hap Lawrence
    • Endocrinology Fellow
    John Walter Davis
    • Medical Technician
    Cynthia Burr
    • Parrish's Girl
    • Director
      • Ken Russell
    • Writer
      • Paddy Chayefsky
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews190

    6.940.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8fred-83

    One of Ken Russell's best films

    This is one of Ken Russell's best films. He manages to balance plot and wild visuals as never before. The acting is also first rate. I watched it again recently I think it still holds up surprisingly well compared to many modern sci-fi movies. The plot is intriguing, I keep thinking that there might be some truth to the concepts presented, and the fact is that our own brains are still largely unexplored territory. A special mention to the extraordinary music written by John Corigliano, and for which he was nominated for an Academy Award. It dares to be loud and violent, and complements the visuals extremely well. This is a wild, original movie unlike any other.
    7willywants

    Intelligent and original...not for everyone though,

    During a series of sensory-deprivation experiments, a professor devolves into a prehistoric form of life. This bizarre yet intriguing sci-fi offering comes from Ken Russell, a genre filmmaker who's made a handful of weak films, including The Lair of the White Worm (1988) and Gothic (1986). The script comes from Paddy Chayefsky, who also wrote the book upon which the film is based. Though Chayefsky disowned the film and Russell's direction, it remains among the best films in both they're careers. The best thing about the film is easily the script, which is intelligent and thought-provoking. Russell's direction is quite good as well; the editing on this film is truly top-notch. The actors gave great performances, especially a very young-looking William Hurt as the lead. In my opinion, Blair Brown's performance was at times a little uneven, but that never hurt the movie. The make-up effects, from Dick Smith, were terrific. The imagery—including visions of hell, a seven-eyed goat-man (how cool is that?), hideously mutated human bodies and a truly trippy vision of the creation of life—are startling. There's some decent gore too, included a nasty gutted lizard (which looks suspiciously realistic if you ask me…) and other goodies I won't spoil for you. Also worth mentioning is a great score from John Corigliano, which is unsettling and very suspenseful.

    This film is NOT for everyone—some viewers might be lost by the scientific aspects of the film and the hallucinogenic scenes. If you like everything explained to you and you're afraid of a little ambiguity, this isn't for you. If you want a different, intelligent sci-fi film…see this.

    7/10.

    Just one complaint though—I'm no scientist, but wouldn't it be impossible for a human being to survive the physical and metabolic changes of a transformation like the one seen in the film? (I know, I know, it's just a movie…).
    I_John_Barrymore_I

    Altered States

    Altered States is frightening, disturbing, bizarre stuff. It also has a strong heart, and the dialogue is witty and sharp.

    This film creates its very real sense of horror from foreboding, often disarming musical cues, and a sense that we're on the journey with Jessup, and we don't know what's real or imagined. It rarely relies on gore, or overt "horror" sequences to affect the viewer, but still manages to be truly frightening and horrifying. Russell tones down his usual excesses, but his stamp is nevertheless all over the disturbing hallucination sequences.

    It's easy to spot the strong influence this film must have had on Videodrome. It creates a similar mood.

    Thoroughly recommended to anyone with a taste for intelligent horror.
    6AlsExGal

    A very frustrating film...

    ... and an early example of psychedelic horror.

    I wanted desperately to like Altered States, because the things it gets right it gets so right. But sadly it's such a tonally inconsistent film, and one that can't seem to focus on anything at all. First it's about a Judeo-Christian concept of hell and the devil, and then it's about some ancient indigenous deity and spirituality, and then it's about some extra-dimensional being, and then it's about genetic memory and body horror, before finally referencing alternate universes. The tone of the film is also sadly inconsistent. At times it's closer to a romantic drama than anything else. When it actually gets down to the horror part it swings strangely between themes of the paranoid mad scientist and the grand tone and sweep of man vs God.

    It's memorable for some of the great special effects of its time, but overall it feels like a conversation you have when you're 19, think you know everything, get really baked, and then start rambling about philosophy with your friends.
    lor_

    Fits like bespoke

    My original review was written in November 1980 after a screening at the Ziegfeld theater: "Altered States" is an exciting combo science fiction-horror film, well-timed to exploit the under-30 market's current enthusiasm for this genre. Direction by Ken Russell has energy to spare, with appropriate match-up of his baroque visual style to special effects-intensive material. With repeat attendance a definite possibility, Warner Brothers could have major hit via this $15,000,000 budgeter.

    Producers Howard Gottfried and Daniel Melnick weathered stormy pre-production problems, including the ankling of director Arthur Penn late in 1978, departure soon after of special effect wiz John Dykstra, and transfer of proposed project from Columbia to Warners as proposed budget grew.

    Screenplay credited to Sidney Aaron (after Paddy Chayefsky insisted his name be removed) follows the Chayefsky novel very closely, retaining much of the dialog and crucial incidents. Tall tale concerns a young psychophysiologist, Edward Jessup (William Hurt), working in New York and later at Harvard on dangerous experiments concerning human consciousness. Despite his having visions of Christ during his childhood, he take a strictly rationalist "God is dead" stance in his search for a meaning behind man's existence.

    Using himself as the subject, Jessup makes use of a sensory deprivation tank (sealing off light, sound, gravity, etc.) to hallucinate back to the event of his birth and beyond, regressing into primitive stages of human evolution.

    As Hurt, a physically commanding young actor becomes increasingly obsessed, his wife Emily provides the film's human balance. She is an anthropologist with a career of her own, portrayed empathetically by the redhead beauty Blair Brown, previously on view in "One-Trick Pony", shot after "Altered States".

    Jessup ventures to Mexico, participating in a mystical Indian rite. Bringing home the Indians' hallucinogenic compounds, he escalates his tank sessions until physically changing into an apelike monster, killing a security guard and escaping into the primitive environment of a neary zoo.

    Returning to normal in "Jekyll and Hyde" fashion, Jessup continues in his folly until wife Emily is also involved, with duo's love romantically conquering the physical (and perhaps psychological) effects. Making for a surprisingly hopeful conclusion.

    Russell has downplayed much of Chayefsky's heady philosophy by having the actors, especially Hurt, rattle off their jargon-laden speeches at breakneck speed. In fact, the thesps' tendency to declaim or shout is the film's weakest element. Countering this defect are the film's impressive hallucinations, akin to the "ultimate trip" light-shows in Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey". Shattering use of Dolby stereo effects conspires with the images to give the viewer a vicarious LSD-type experience sans drugs. While not for all tastes, this aspect of the pic should win over the youth audience.

    Film's action scenes are also potent, with Eric Jenkins' top-notch editing bringing it all in at under 100 minutes. Dick Smith's makeup is outstanding, and combines with the physical agility of Miguel Godreau as the apeman to suspend disbelief during the most outrageous horror scenes.

    William Hurt's feature film debut is arresting, especially during the film's grueling climactic sequence. Hopefully he will be given a chance to relax in future roles. Blair Brown is warm and appealing, while also up to the physical demands of nudity and mayhem typical of Russell's approach. Charles Haid's gruff, southern-fried medico creates solid comic relief between action crescendos.

    A newcomer to films, classical composer John Corigliano has penned an atonal score which more than holds its own amidst a barrage of sound effects. Effects men and the whole technical crew, deserve kudos including cameraman Jordan Cronenweth for his lighting and tracking. Their combined efforts should "zap" audiences with a theatrical film experience they can't get at home.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Film debut of William Hurt.
    • Goofs
      When the Brujo tells Eccheverria that he'll allow Eddie to participate in the ceremony, he walks off. Although in only a matter of seconds he's far enough away that they have to run quite a distance to catch up to him to ask him some further questions, this is consistent with other literary and screen depictions of shamans having "spooky" abilities, sure-footedness, and being surprisingly limber for their age. Rather than an error in continuity, this seems to be a dramatic device.
    • Quotes

      Eddie Jessup: Emily's quite content to go on with this life. She insists she's in love with me - whatever that is. What she means is she prefers the senseless pain we inflict on each other to the pain we would otherwise inflict on ourselves. But I'm not afraid of that solitary pain. In fact, if I don't strip myself of all this clatter and clutter and ridiculous ritual, I shall go out of my fucking mind. Does that answer your question, Arthur?

      Arthur Rosenberg: What question was that?

      Eddie Jessup: You asked me why I was getting divorced.

      Arthur Rosenberg: Oh, listen, it's your life. I'm sorry I even asked.

    • Crazy credits
      In the end credits, the cast list appears last after all but the movie company name and logo. Usually the cast list appears either very early in the credits or sometimes approximately a third of the way through.
    • Alternate versions
      ABC edited 7 minutes from this film for its 1983 network television premiere.
    • Connections
      Edited into 365 days, also known as a Year (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      Voile d'Orphee
      by Pierre Henry

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 30, 1981 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Estados alterados
    • Filming locations
      • Sierra Tarahumara, Chihuahua, Mexico(Rock formations visited by Eddie)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $19,853,892
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $174,650
      • Dec 28, 1980
    • Gross worldwide
      • $19,853,898
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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