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L'expérience interdite

Original title: Flatliners
  • 1990
  • 12
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
97K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,830
716
Kevin Bacon, Julia Roberts, and Kiefer Sutherland in L'expérience interdite (1990)
Psychological HorrorPsychological ThrillerDramaHorrorSci-FiThriller

Five medical students experiment with "near death" experiences, until the dark consequences of past tragedies begin to jeopardize their lives.Five medical students experiment with "near death" experiences, until the dark consequences of past tragedies begin to jeopardize their lives.Five medical students experiment with "near death" experiences, until the dark consequences of past tragedies begin to jeopardize their lives.

  • Director
    • Joel Schumacher
  • Writer
    • Peter Filardi
  • Stars
    • Kiefer Sutherland
    • Kevin Bacon
    • Julia Roberts
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    97K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,830
    716
    • Director
      • Joel Schumacher
    • Writer
      • Peter Filardi
    • Stars
      • Kiefer Sutherland
      • Kevin Bacon
      • Julia Roberts
    • 211User reviews
    • 80Critic reviews
    • 55Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos2

    Flatliners (1990)
    Trailer 1:14
    Flatliners (1990)
    So '90s It Hurts: 'Flatliners'
    Video 1:53
    So '90s It Hurts: 'Flatliners'
    So '90s It Hurts: 'Flatliners'
    Video 1:53
    So '90s It Hurts: 'Flatliners'

    Photos83

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    Top cast58

    Edit
    Kiefer Sutherland
    Kiefer Sutherland
    • Nelson Wright
    Kevin Bacon
    Kevin Bacon
    • David Labraccio
    Julia Roberts
    Julia Roberts
    • Dr. Rachel Mannus
    William Baldwin
    William Baldwin
    • Joe Hurley
    Oliver Platt
    Oliver Platt
    • Randy Steckle
    Kimberly Scott
    Kimberly Scott
    • Winnie Hicks
    Joshua Rudoy
    Joshua Rudoy
    • Billy Mahoney
    Benjamin Mouton
    Benjamin Mouton
    • Rachel's Father
    Aeryk Egan
    • Young Nelson
    Kesha Reed
    • Young Winnie
    Hope Davis
    Hope Davis
    • Anne Coldren
    Jim Ortlieb
    Jim Ortlieb
    • Uncle Dave
    John Duda
    • Young Labraccio
    • (as John Joseph Duda)
    Megan Stewart
    • Playground Kid
    Tressa Thomas
    Tressa Thomas
    • Playground Kid
    Gonzo Gonzalez
    • Playground Kid
    Afram Bill Williams
    • Ben Hicks
    Dtduda1
    • Terry
    • (as Deborah Thompson)
    • Director
      • Joel Schumacher
    • Writer
      • Peter Filardi
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews211

    6.696.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7CihanVercan

    Flatliners builds a Suspension Bridge between Life and Death, then starts walking on it

    Countless TV displays and the memorable appearances from 4 of today's mega-stars(plus Hope Davis's screen debut) keep Flatliners still in prudence. The plot is about a non-academic research of five medicine undergrads pursuing one's crazy idea on discovering the secret of death, and learn what's after death, then come back to life again. Yet the storyline hasn't been designed as fascinating as the idea of the plot.

    There are popular stereotypes to develop a regular teen-slasher script in Flatliners. There is Nelson who creates the idea of decoding death, pretty but introverted Rachel, David who cuts the Gordian knot on luckily not to be dismissed from the school, ladies' man Joe and finally the smart guy Randy("I did not come to medical school to murder my class mates no matter how deranged they might be"). They join hands altogether in an experiment where Nelson's heart will be stopped and rerythmed. Then they decide to continue this experiment in strict confidence at night times in the campus. Not long after Nelson's experience everyone starts a race over having the wildest and the longest death experience, risking their lives one by one. Yet, soon they realize their daily life becomes affected from those experiences they had. The visits to the afterlife brings back their delinquent feelings from their childhood memories. Depolarizing their deep subconscious watchfulness, they begin having somatic delusions and visual hallucinations.

    When the point comes where the explanation of subconscious, director Joel Schumacher skips that every humankind has a subconscious personality which they are not aware of. This inner personality keeps one from altering into identity loss. If you lose or if you depolarize this subconscious personality you certainly lose your identity instead of refreshing childhood memories. I wanted to add this as a movie mistake, which already has been mentioned via movie critics in the earlier 90s'. Obviously here in this movie Schumacher made the actors have it least affected. Then why do they hesitate continuing on the experiment after learning their lesson, as if death is designed indiscoverable by God? David had been introduced as an Atheist, now he turned out to believe in God when he recalled a flashback from his childhood. After witnessing this 180 degreed change in David, it's clear to see that Schumacher's film was so conservative and lily-livered; that's ultimately why it's never classified as a work of science fiction. Alas! It had a good potential. It even tried to tell the unconscious maturation from having a death experience, beginning to believe that death is so simply natural and it's only a part of a human's life.

    More than what's in the movie, it was also memorable to recall what's with the movie. Jan de Bont as the cinematographer, who had worked almost every time with Schumacher, creates an dreamy atmosphere like it's being an Gothic horror movie. The blue color schemes all over the walls reflecting into the actors' faces deliver first class of lighting, that suits perfectly with the film. The close-up shots of the gargoyle statues in the campus buildings, Catholic frescoes in the walls, stop-motion cameras, and the dynamic camera speeds were all belong to Bont's skills.

    Flatliners became a cult movie in time with its sociological pen-portrait of the X-generation juvenile especially via its futuristic editing style with storyboard connection sequences like being part of a video music clip so much aesthetically. Those were the times where fast-paced and multi-sequenced video music clips were on rise. This style was very rare to come across in those years after its pioneer Tony Scott's "The Hunger(1983)".
    9claudio_carvalho

    Afterlife, Sins and Atonement

    The medical student Nelson Wright (Kiefer Sutherland) invites Joe Hurley (William Baldwin), David Labraccio (Kevin Bacon), Rachel Mannus (Julia Roberts) and Randy Steckle (Oliver Platt), who are friends from his class, to participate in a near death experiment where he will die for one minute to see whether there is afterlife or not. After the successful result, Nelson tells that there is something afterlife and hides that he saw the boy Billy Mahoney that he used to bully with his friends. The next to try is Joe, who likes to secretly videotape women that he has sex. He stays dead for a longer time and has an erotic experience. Then the atheist David is the next to try the experiment for a longer time. He sees the black girl Winnie Hicks that he used to bully at school, and later he is haunted by her. David tries to convince Rachel Mannus to avoid the experiment but she is already dead when he arrives at the university. Soon Rachel is haunted by her deceased father that she believes died because of her. David learns that Nelson is haunted and injured by Billy Mahoney and discovers that they are haunted by their sins and atonement is the only way out. What will happen to them?

    "Flatliners" is a suspenseful horror film directed by Joel Schumacher in 1990 with a great cast. The storyline of afterlife, sins and atonement is original and well-resolved. Unfortunately this great storyline was recently used in a totally unnecessary remake. My vote is nine.

    Title (Brazil): "Linha Mortal" ("Mortal Line")
    7mentalcritic

    A vaguely original horror idea

    The basic premise of Flatliners is fairly simple. Several medical students put themselves at the point of death in order to find out exactly what the brain does during the fact. It sounds like something a mob of bored students would do for a joke, but it forms the basis of some very creepy substories. In today's world, where Hollywood has to mine foreign markets for the ideas to make a horror film, Flatliners is one of those rare gems that show Hollywood can make something different when it tries hard enough.

    What separates Flatliners from a lot of films based on this premise that would come out today is that it does not stoop to being condescending or arrogant. Flatliners recognises that people go to films to be entertained, not moralised to. In this kind of supernatural thriller, the difference this restraint makes is really incredible. What's even more incredible is that Julia Roberts appears without being annoying or demonstrating that she can only play Julia Roberts. The theory of obscurity, that performing artists do their best work with the smallest audience, is in force here.

    The subplots concerning what the characters find during their loss of pretty much everything that makes them alive, and how it comes back to intrude on their present time, are done surprisingly well. The moments when William Baldwin's character finds his personal videotape collection coming back to haunt him are especially intriguing. That William Baldwin seems so perfectly cast in the role says a lot either about the script or the direction. I am not sure which.

    Kiefer Sutherland, on the other hand, really shines as the lead. One really feels for him as the mystery of what past experience is intruding on the present and why unfolds. As Kevin Bacon's character goes to find an old school pier whose life he made hell and tell her how sorry he is, it becomes clearer what the film is about. We can try to change the past as much as we like, but it's what we do with the present that matters most.

    Another good aspect of Flatliners is how it achieves an atmosphere without the use of expensive, elaborate visual effects. Quite unusually for what is essentially a horror film, Flatliners did not expend its budget in places where it did not need to. Much of what we see during the more surreal sequences is a case of professional pretending, simple trick photography, or stock footage. Sometimes the simplest things are the best.

    If there is a problem with the film, it's that it feels about ten minutes too short. The ending seems more perfunctory than conclusive, as if someone in the studio asked the director to wrap the film up so they can bring it out at a certain market time. Of course, many films have been left with sore spots for this very reason, so Flatliners shouldn't really need to be any different. The hundred and fifteen minutes we do get is highly satisfactory, though not overly brilliant.

    I gave Flatliners a seven out of ten. It works well as a date flick or a kind of late-night popcorn film. That aside, it makes a good reminder that low-budget horror shows weren't always sad pieces of garbage.
    8Drooch

    Good premise into well-told story

    Flatliners has all the ingredients of a good Joel Schumacher film - intelligent, youthful characters, stunning cinematography, a gripping story, and excellent performances. It's escapist fun but it's done very well and resonates with a positive spiritual message despite the unnerving precedings.

    Schumacher has a knack for spotting talented young actors, and all of the main five here have gone on to greater things (see the cast list). Their believable performances help to raise this movie well above average. Kiefer Sutherland shines in his egotistical med-student role.

    The cinematography really stimulates the right side of the brain, which is what I love about Schumacher; his use of light and location create images that stick. A disturbing nightmarish atmosphere is created which unsettles you while you watch the film and haunts you when you go to bed - reminded me of The Lost Boys.

    This is a film that takes an awesome premise - curious students want to find out what's after death, and successfully follows it through into a scary, gripping tale of redemption. One of Schumacher's best; highly recommended.
    7pongup

    Thriller without gore

    As the remake is coming out this week, I want to see how the original did, and I am not disappointed. This movie is a thriller without gore. The idea of forcing near death experience is intriguing and the stories around the characters are interesting. But what made it super special is that it featured the best stars at the time -- Julia Robert, Kevin Bacon, Kiefer, Oliver Plat and William Bacon, all together in one movie. And all the stars delivered their great performances. As for the remake, the bad news is it is very hard for it to surpass the original as the latter set such a high standard. But the good news is we can always have the original to be appreciated, in case the remake is a flop.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      During pre-production, the actors worked with medical technical advisor Ruth F. Ekholm, who tutored them on the proper medical procedures for the scenes in which the students flatline on the EKG and EEG machines, signaling cardiac and brain death, respectively. They also took advantage of Peter Filardi's research of published accounts from people who'd had near-death experiences. Almost all accident victims reported a tunnel leading to a beautiful white light and friendly voices. People who had attempted suicide had troubled, emotionally painful near-death experiences.
    • Goofs
      While a defibrillator is of no use if a patient has truly flatlined, a patient in a "fine v-fib" rhythm can appear to have flatlined but still be revived with the paddles. Therefore, when in doubt, the Advanced Cardiac Life Support guidelines call for administering the shock, though it's not the treatment of choice.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Nelson Wright: Today is a good day to die.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Flatliners/Young Guns II/The Two Jakes/Metropolitan/Life Is Cheap... But Toilet Paper Is Expensive (1990)
    • Soundtracks
      PARTY TOWN
      Written and Performed by David A. Stewart (as Dave Stewart)

      Courtesy of BMG Records (UK) Ltd.

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    FAQ26

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 9, 1991 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Línea mortal
    • Filming locations
      • Museum of Science & Industry - 57th & Lake Shore Drive, Jackson Park, Hyde Park, Chicago, Illinois, USA(exteriors: Tait Building)
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Stonebridge Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $26,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $61,489,265
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $10,034,685
      • Aug 12, 1990
    • Gross worldwide
      • $61,489,638
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 55m(115 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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