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Being Human

  • 1994
  • PG-13
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
4.4K
YOUR RATING
Robin Williams in Being Human (1994)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Play trailer1:51
2 Videos
41 Photos
ComedyDrama

A man's blunders regarding his family are told and retold through different eras in history.A man's blunders regarding his family are told and retold through different eras in history.A man's blunders regarding his family are told and retold through different eras in history.

  • Director
    • Bill Forsyth
  • Writer
    • Bill Forsyth
  • Stars
    • Robin Williams
    • John Turturro
    • Kelly Hunter
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    4.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bill Forsyth
    • Writer
      • Bill Forsyth
    • Stars
      • Robin Williams
      • John Turturro
      • Kelly Hunter
    • 46User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
    • 33Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Being Human
    Trailer 1:51
    Being Human
    Being Human Clip
    Clip 2:46
    Being Human Clip
    Being Human Clip
    Clip 2:46
    Being Human Clip

    Photos41

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    Top cast88

    Edit
    Robin Williams
    Robin Williams
    • Hector
    John Turturro
    John Turturro
    • Lucinnius
    Kelly Hunter
    Kelly Hunter
    • Deirdre
    Maudie Johnson
    • Girl Child
    Max Johnson
    • Boy Child
    Robert Carlyle
    Robert Carlyle
    • Priest
    Eoin McCarthy
    Eoin McCarthy
    • Leader
    Irvine Allen
    • Raider
    Iain Andrew
    • Raider
    Robert Cavanah
    Robert Cavanah
    • Raider
    Tony Curran
    Tony Curran
    • Raider
    Andrew Flanagan
    • Raider
    • (as Andy Flanagan)
    Seamus Gubbins
    • Raider
    Iain McAleese
    • Raider
    David McGowan
    David McGowan
    • Raider
    Gavin Mitchell
    • Raider
    Michael Nardone
    Michael Nardone
    • Raider
    Brian O'Malley
    • Raider
    • Director
      • Bill Forsyth
    • Writer
      • Bill Forsyth
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    5.34.3K
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    Featured reviews

    7Brian14Leonard

    Not as bad as the initial reviews indicated

    Being Human is probably Bill Forsyth's "worst" film. And it got some of the LOUSIEST reviews ever when released. But Bill Forsyth's worst is still better than most people's best, and there was some positive reappraisal of it when the video came out. I think it's worth seeing, especially if you don't compare it to Forsyth's great films (Local Hero, Housekeeping, Gregory's Girl). Robin Williams is fine, as usual, as our anti-hero through time, and if the plot and running jokes wear more than a little thin by the end, the journey is still interesting.
    7bellino-angelo2014

    Nice experiment, and certainly a different movie

    In the first story a caveman's family is taken away by raiders despite he does his best for stopping them and she recommends him to take care of the children. In the second story Hector (Robin Williams) is a slave to the foolish Lucinnius (John Turturro) who loses his fortune and finds forced to kill himself, and Hector helps him in doing so but can't return to his family because he becomes slave to another man. In the third story Hector is a Spanish crusader that has to return to his family, but can't because he befriends a priest (Vincent D'Onofrio) and even wants to join him. In the fourth story he is a portuguese man in the Renaissance shipwrecked in Africa and his wife from the previous story here is his lover. In the fifth and final story Hector lives in the present New York and is helped by his wife and kids to find a good way in life since he is in sorrow for the mistakes he did in his past lives, and they too, deal with this.

    BEING HUMAN is certainly not a movie for everyone, but it's one of the most original movies I have ever seen. The way the stories are connected is focused and it makes you think and ask the question if you might have been someone in another life in the past. Robin Williams gives one of his most straight performances of his career as the same man in different settings that has always different challenges connected to one thing. The need to return to his family. The supporting cast (Turturro, D'Onofrio, WIlliam Macy and a few others) are all pretty entertaining and the direction is very focused.

    Overall, one of the most unique movies you can find and mostly recommended to folks who on occasion love seeing something different. I would also recommend to not think too much while watching, because your head might explode if you focus too much on the details and try to analyze them.
    7JuguAbraham

    Cerebral storytelling

    Fables were used in the past to tell stories to children. Here Hector (Robin Williams) and a woman story teller (Theresa Russel) whom we never see but only hear, weave several stories for Hector's children to explain his absence from their lives for several years. Each story attempts to explain figuratively what emotions he went through during the period.

    An attentive viewer is amply rewarded by director Bill Forsyth--if you are a casual viewer you will wonder what is happening and consider the film to be disjointed and hence poor entertainment.

    Non-linear narratives are not Forsyth's invention--such films have adorned French and Hungarian cinema for decades. "Being Human" is above average in that company merely because of fine performances from Williams, the beautiful Anna Galiena (Beatrice) an Italian actress, Hector Elizondo, John Turturro, William Macy, and Ewan McGregor to mention a few.

    While the imaginative storytelling technique was impressive, Forsyth never explains who the lady narrator is. Are we expected to imagine it to be Hector's new love? The gradual jumps in time scales, gives us a socio-historical perspective into Hector's education in life, seen through the eyes of his children. Forsyth is interesting but not the best director using this technique. His film demands attention, both literally and figuratively.

    I understand that the director disowns the film after the studios forced him to truncate the film by 40 minutes. Probably the director's cut is far superior to the present version and is likely to be more satisfying to a discerning viewer.
    7Glaschu

    They're Celts

    The first scene, sometimes referred to as cavemen, Goths or Vikings in reviews seems more accurately to be ancient Celts. The language they speak is made of broken Scottish or Irish Gaelic. On the other hand, maybe it was Robin Williams who was the Celt and the marauders spoke broken Gaelic because it was foreign to them. Hmmm. Without more information (they are a fairly laconic lot) I would assume they are probably a rival tribe of fellow Gaelic-speaking Celts of Scotland or Ireland. This was a welcome tidbit at the beginning of the film and probably added to my enjoyment.

    I appreciated the attempt to portray the ordinariness of life throughout the ages and I view the slowness of the film in this light. Life is often slow. These were interesting vignette-like character studies of one man who is never able to be completely in control of situations around him, but who perseveres.
    7Rodrigo_Amaro

    Deeply flawed but quite good

    The life you live will be the same over and over again. You will repeat your lessons again and again in various forms until you have learned them. After learning it, there's evolution and wisdom. This is what can be said about this film except that it presents its stories without having this sort of spiritual value. It brings this idea of the eternal returning throughout this main character but it is developed almost like a fairy tale taken out of a children's book.

    Travelling through different countries and periods of time, going from the Celts cavemen to the modern New York businessman, "Being Human" has Robin Williams playing a character named Hector and his appearances in distinct centuries trying to learn what means to be a human being. In the five short stories created here, Hector, living as a Celtic in the highlands, had his wife and children taken away by barbarians; was the slave of a dumb master (John Turturro) in a more civilized era; a married man who fell in love with a foreign woman, a few centuries later; a military during the Portugual's Maritime Expansion on Africa, conquering new lands and new treasures; and as a troubled divorced man trying to reconciliate with his children of whom he hasn't seen since the end of his marriage. The movie fails in being real or accurate enough in all of the stories except in the last one which is very close to us.

    Slow, of mannered delivery and hardly getting better as the stories unfold, "Being Human" is the kind of film that really follows its lessons, it'll only grow on you after countless views. In my case four attempts, of these in two I fell asleep (but always believing that there was something interesting there), one in which I watched the whole thing and didn't like and the last one in which my perception changed and end up being a good film, far from being a masterpiece that it could be. So, you'll have to watch this film over and over until you get something from it, then you can evolve into really saying if this is a good or a bad film.

    This whole idea of a man trapped in strange and quite horrendous situations where every kind of decision ruin his life but always running to something else thinking it'll be better and lead him to a good life, was brilliantly presented in a book called "The Star Rover" by Jack London. In it, the main character is a prisoner that can recall his past lives as a way of escaping from his current pain of being tortured. But in those lives things don't get any better and he's always getting into more and more trouble. "Being Human" falls as a pretentious art film with symbolisms that never work and stories that are difficult to be involved with. Luckily, they have Williams as a main actor and we root for him whatever the Hector he's playing. We care for Hector in all of his situations because there's something there that is involving enough to make us imagining what kind of decisions we would make if we were him. In at least, one of the stories you'll put yourself into Hector's shoes.

    Won't blame director/writer Bill Forsyth for the flaws presented here since this is not his original project, Warner Bros. Forced him to cut the film and include a narration that is quite excessive and too much explanatory. The narration (provided by Theresa Russell) of a film destined to grown up's treats its audience as children, explaining many things we're seeing on the screen. It ruined some parts of the film. Result: poor criticism, a box-office failure and now who knows this film? I sincerely hope that one day Forsyth come out of the shadows and show to the world this film in its integrity in a director's cut DVD (even the known version is hard to find).

    The things that attracted me into "Being Human" are the quality of the performances, not only Williams but also Turturro, Lorraine Bracco, Hector Elizondo, Jonathan Hyde, Anna Galiena, William H. Macy among others; the beautiful cinematography; Michael Gibbs fantastic musical score (specially the music presented when the movie enters into the 20th Century, a highly agitated theme). The story, at times, knows how to hold our interest but only for those who have an open mind to accept the concept of a man living over and over a similar life that bears only difference of costumes and periods of time. Hector's conditions and the way love acts in his life are quite the same, yet he fails to learn something from these experiences.

    Very problematic but not enough to make you feel bad about it, "Being Human" comes as a good film about valuable and noble lessons that sometimes crosses our paths in this long journey of life. 7/10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Due to adverse reaction at preview screenings, Warner Bros instructed the director, Bill Forsyth, to trim the film by 40 minutes as well as adding narration and a happy ending. Forsyth subsequently disowned the film as a result.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      The Storyteller: This is the story of a story. Once upon a time there was this story, and the story said to itself, how should I begin?

      Hector: Try the usual way.

      The Storyteller: What, in the dark with a man and a woman, in a story that is still to tell itself?

      Hector: Well, you've got to start somewhere. Say, long long ago... Or, far far away... Or, another time in a different distant country... Or just, once...

      The Storyteller: That's good. "Far away", so you know the place is close to your own heart. "Once" is nice, so we know that it always happens. Hmm, Once there was this hero...

      Hector: [wryly] Some hero.

      The Storyteller: Some man then. Any man. Say, a man, a woman, and some children. Don't forget the children.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: When a Man Loves a Woman/PCU/With Honors/No Escape/The Favor (1994)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 6, 1994 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Japan
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Gaelic
    • Also known as
      • Les mille et une vies d'Hector
    • Filming locations
      • Glen Coe, Highland, Scotland, UK
    • Production companies
      • Warner Bros.
      • Enigma Productions
      • BSB
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $40,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,519,366
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $764,011
      • May 8, 1994
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,519,366
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 2m(122 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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