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The Dying Gaul

  • 2005
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
The Dying Gaul (2005)
Home Video Trailer from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Play trailer2:19
10 Videos
22 Photos
DramaRomanceThriller

A grief-stricken screenwriter unknowingly enters a three-way relationship with a woman and her film executive husband - to chilling results.A grief-stricken screenwriter unknowingly enters a three-way relationship with a woman and her film executive husband - to chilling results.A grief-stricken screenwriter unknowingly enters a three-way relationship with a woman and her film executive husband - to chilling results.

  • Director
    • Craig Lucas
  • Writer
    • Craig Lucas
  • Stars
    • Peter Sarsgaard
    • Campbell Scott
    • Patricia Clarkson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Craig Lucas
    • Writer
      • Craig Lucas
    • Stars
      • Peter Sarsgaard
      • Campbell Scott
      • Patricia Clarkson
    • 57User reviews
    • 33Critic reviews
    • 62Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos10

    The Dying Gaul
    Trailer 2:19
    The Dying Gaul
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 4
    Clip 1:04
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 4
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 4
    Clip 1:04
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 4
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 6
    Clip 0:50
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 6
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 8
    Clip 0:55
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 8
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 1
    Clip 1:16
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 1
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 7
    Clip 1:15
    The Dying Gaul Scene: Scene 7

    Photos22

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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Peter Sarsgaard
    Peter Sarsgaard
    • Robert
    Campbell Scott
    Campbell Scott
    • Jeffrey
    Patricia Clarkson
    Patricia Clarkson
    • Elaine
    Ryan Miller
    • Max
    Faith Jefferies
    Faith Jefferies
    • Debbon
    Robin Bartlett
    Robin Bartlett
    • Bella
    Ebon Moss-Bachrach
    Ebon Moss-Bachrach
    • Olaf
    Kelli O'Hara
    Kelli O'Hara
    • Liz
    Dee Dee Flores
    • Emad
    Elizabeth Marvel
    Elizabeth Marvel
    • Kelli
    Don Johanson
    Don Johanson
    • Male Guest
    Bill Camp
    Bill Camp
    • Malcolm
    Linda Emond
    Linda Emond
    • Dr. Foss
    Michael John
    Michael John
    • Executive Producer
    Craig Hamrick
    • Party Guest
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    Thomas Jay Ryan
    Thomas Jay Ryan
      Jason-Shane Scott
      Jason-Shane Scott
      • Robert's Masseuse
      • (uncredited)
      Bridgetta Tomarchio
      Bridgetta Tomarchio
      • Female Guest
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Craig Lucas
      • Writer
        • Craig Lucas
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews57

      6.42.5K
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      Featured reviews

      5baho-1

      Greek Tragedy

      Somehow, this movie managed to hold my interest despite the fact that I never really cared about the characters or what was going to happen to them next. It's not a love story. Not a very good relationship tale. Not a mystery or thriller. Instead, Dying Gaul is a modern day Greek tragedy that uses Hollywood and homosexuality as simply vehicles to generate interest.

      This is Craig Lucas' first time in the director's chair. He wrote The Secret Lives of Dentists (previously at Sundance, starring Patricia Clarkson). The movies tackle the same themes---the value and meaning of marriage, the impact of dalliances, the complexities of finding happiness and satisfaction without veering from tradition. But Dying Gaul comes at it with a different … orientation, and even outcome.

      Patricia Clarkson is always excellent, but here she shows a little evil in her character, which is outside her normal range. Unfortunately, the rest of the cast comes off as wooden, certainly uninspired. Pay attention, because there are liberal doses of philosophy in the form of quotes and counsel. But the real tragedy here is the lack of a meaningful story or compelling characters.
      7wlawson60

      Darkest Dark Or Maybe Darker

      Hollywood is always a sinister setting, even for a comedy and "The Dying Gaul" is no exception. I don't intend to divulge the ins and outs of the story because that should be your job, but I feel compelled to talk about it because it kind of stacked all over me like some kind of alien jelly. I always loved Campbell Scott and I suspect I always will. He plays the devil - The "I'll give you a million bucks if you abandon completely yourself, your principles, your loyalties" - kind of devil - He is married to the splendid Patricia Clarkson ( part Meryl Streep part Wayland Flower's Madame) and the object of his temptation is Peter Sarsgaard, one of the best creepiest actors ever to appear on film. It may be a personal thing but he gives me the willies. The film is an uncomfortable journey through a strangely familiar landscape that becomes darker and darker. I will take my chances and recommend it.
      6dglink

      Trio of Talented Actors in an Unconvincing and Wordy Film

      Despite the earnest work of three talented actors, "The Dying Gaul" is a slow and ponderous film that betrays its stage origins. Unfortunately, the film opens with a scene that seems improbable, if not downright impossible, as a film producer attempts to purchase an original screenplay from a first-time writer who plays coy over principles, despite a million-dollar carrot. Before long, the producer seduces the writer, and the two men carry on an illicit affair behind the back of the producer's wife. However, the wife is intrigued after meeting the writer, and she begins to correspond with him in on-line chat rooms under the guise of a gay man. The sham that the wife uses to uncover the affair and psychologically harass the young writer would not fool anyone, let alone an educated writer, and the film falls apart from lack of credibility. Although Hitchcock may have been able to make lengthy scenes of two characters instant-messaging each other over a computer into classic cinema, director Craig Lucas has yet to hone those skills, and the instant-messaging exchanges are leaden to be polite. Fortunately, my watch has a dial that illuminates in the dark. The direction of the film in general is slowly paced, and there is little visual excitement or breaking through the boundaries of the stage-bound dialog.

      Fortunately, the always-wonderful Patricia Clarkson plays the wife, and she does wonders with a part that is not intrinsically interesting. While Peter Sarsgaard generally falls into the "always-wonderful" category as well, his subtly mincing shtick as the gay writer seems as though it were lifted from the worst episodes of "Will and Grace." Sarsgaard played a gay (or bisexual) man far more convincingly in "Kinsey." While there certainly are effeminate and fey gay men, those stereotypes have already been played to death on screen, and a fresher concept would have been expected of an actor with the talents of Sarsgaard. Campbell Scott plays his part well, although, when a viewer's mind wanders to thoughts of how well Scott is aging, the actor is apparently not fully engaging the audience's attention.

      "The Dying Gaul," while not a complete failure, is nonetheless a disappointment and little more than an acting exercise for three talented performers. The wordiness and leisurely pacing may have worked on stage, and the flimsy plot devices may also have played more credibly in the theater. However, on film, "The Dying Gaul" fails to engage or convince and ultimately falls flat.
      9Lechuguilla

      The Deadly Buddha

      Suppose you had intimate knowledge about someone, and that someone did not know that you knew. How would you use that knowledge? Or would you? This issue is the undercurrent that carries the film's plot, like a fast moving stream, over a cliff, to a swirling, uncontrollable emotional vortex that changes people's lives forever.

      Set in modern Los Angeles, a grieving gay screenwriter named Robert (Peter Sarsgaard) meets with Jeffrey (Campbell Scott), a wealthy film producer, to talk about Robert's script "The Dying Gaul", a tribute to his deceased lover and soul mate. Jeffrey invites Robert to his mansion by the ocean to meet his wife Elaine (Patricia Clarkson), who reads Robert's script and loves it. Over time, Robert and Elaine become friends, which sets up a triangular relationship that careens out of control when the anonymity of internet chat rooms provides cover for the discovery of secrets.

      Artsy in tone and philosophy, the film exudes New Age dialogue, with conversation about Buddhist Karma, "the middle way", enlightenment, and deadly plant roots. The film's production design is chic. And while the color cinematography is mostly conventional, sometimes it is beautifully stylistic. I really liked those stark human silhouettes against that orange screen. The film's score, which connotes New Age spiritualism, is terrific.

      Acting of the three leads is quite good. Patricia Clarkson is great as she sits in front of a computer monitor and, without speaking, displays myriad emotions through her facial expressions alone.

      The chat room scenes are creative and emotionally potent, amid magnified keyboard clicking sounds. The back and forth exchange here is unusual, and striking in that it is meaningless when taken out of context, but highly enlightening when considered in relation to the film's plot, as this sample shows: "Hello"; "I hear clicking"; "I'm still here"; "Are you still there?"; "Yes"; "You sound really distracted"; "Yeah today"; "When?" "I'm sorry"; "No, I'm all yours"; "Are mine what?"; "No"; "Yes"; "Meaning?"; "I'm all yours now".

      The film's screenplay does contain a rather obvious plot hole. And a couple of scenes involving Robert's son and former wife are too tangential to the story's trajectory. But these are minor issues.

      "The Dying Gaul" may seem artistically or philosophically pretentious to some viewers. But I really liked it. Quite aside from the wonderful performances and the chic production values, the film's story has thematic depth, a quality lacking in most mainstream Hollywood films.
      10awjonesjr

      Devious

      First off, the less you know about this movie before seeing it, the better. Go in clean. And just let it such you in. Here are a few things you CAN know. (a) The screenwriter/director, Craig Lucas, is gay but wrote his best known play, PRELUDE TO A KISS, about a straight relationship that has overtones of homosexuality. (b) Patricia Clarkson may be the finest actress of her age. She flits around the first 20 minutes of this movie in a bra and panties, toyingly svelt but with a panther-like quality you only realize later. (c) This is a movie without a protagonist or an antagonist -- or more accurate, a movie in which each of the main characters take turns at being the antagonist and protagonist. (d) Despite the gay aspects, this is really a movie about betrayal, and it is fiendishly mean (but in a good way). (e) Peter Sarsgaard has never looked handsomer. (f) That's all you need to know. See it.

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        The film is dedicated to writer/director Craig Lucas's best friend, playwright Tony Kushner.
      • Quotes

        [as he hugs Robert]

        Jeffrey: You are very handsome. And I'm getting a little turned on. Are you?

      • Connections
        Featured in 2006 Glitter Awards (2006)

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      FAQ19

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • March 17, 2006 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Official site
        • Holedigger Studios
      • Language
        • English
      • Also known as
        • El gal moribund
      • Filming locations
        • Paramount Gate, Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio scenes.)
      • Production companies
        • Holedigger Films
        • Rebel Park Pictures
        • TwoPoundBag Productions
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Budget
        • $4,000,000 (estimated)
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $342,747
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $53,944
        • Nov 6, 2005
      • Gross worldwide
        • $345,041
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 32m(92 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Dolby Digital
        • SDDS
        • Stereo
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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