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Bondage

  • 2006
  • R
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
501
YOUR RATING
Bondage (2006)
BiographyDrama

A 16 year old suburban kid escapes an abusive home only to find himself entangled in the California Juvenile Justice system and a psychiatric ward.A 16 year old suburban kid escapes an abusive home only to find himself entangled in the California Juvenile Justice system and a psychiatric ward.A 16 year old suburban kid escapes an abusive home only to find himself entangled in the California Juvenile Justice system and a psychiatric ward.

  • Director
    • Eric Allen Bell
  • Writer
    • Eric Allen Bell
  • Stars
    • Michael Angarano
    • Illeana Douglas
    • Griffin Dunne
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    501
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Eric Allen Bell
    • Writer
      • Eric Allen Bell
    • Stars
      • Michael Angarano
      • Illeana Douglas
      • Griffin Dunne
    • 16User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Michael Angarano
    Michael Angarano
    • Charlie
    Illeana Douglas
    Illeana Douglas
    • Elaine Edwards
    Griffin Dunne
    Griffin Dunne
    • Dr. Simon
    Eric Lange
    Eric Lange
    • Bob Edwards
    Evan Ellingson
    Evan Ellingson
    • Mark Edwards
    Mae Whitman
    Mae Whitman
    • Angelica
    Andy Dick
    Andy Dick
    • Stewart
    Rocky Marquette
    Rocky Marquette
    • Richard
    Michael Kenneth Williams
    Michael Kenneth Williams
    • Willie
    • (as Michael K. Williams)
    Ezra Buzzington
    Ezra Buzzington
    • Fred
    Robert Zepeda
    • Reyes
    Jose Pablo Cantillo
    Jose Pablo Cantillo
    • Spider
    Kevin Derkash
    Kevin Derkash
    • Vincent
    Shant Marashlian
    Shant Marashlian
    • Hamid
    Paul Peglar
    Paul Peglar
    • Dennis
    Sasha Perl-Raver
    Sasha Perl-Raver
    • Photographer
    Wes Robinson
    Wes Robinson
    • Mike Lozano
    J.J. Soria
    J.J. Soria
    • Mexican Inmate #2
    • (as Joseph Julian Soria)
    • Director
      • Eric Allen Bell
    • Writer
      • Eric Allen Bell
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    5.7501
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    Featured reviews

    10indyfan1983

    "Garden State" meets "Trainspotting"

    I think that is a more accurate summary because, even though "Girl, Interrupted does deal with someone who is institutionalized, "Bondage" has nothing in common with the style or feeling of that film. It has more of a pace and an edge like "Trainspotting" in my opinion.

    This movie is so not the kind of thing you would see coming from a major studio. It isn't lame or predictable and it doesn't talk down to it's audience. This reminds me more of the kinds of stories that were being made into movies like in the late sixties and early seventies. I guess what I'm saying is it has like more of a soul.

    Also the guy who wrote it and directed it and raised all the money to make it also lived it. And that has a power to it all its own.

    This movie is totally original, and for that reason I think a lot of cynical types won't get it at all. I just know that the packed house at the premiere was filled with people who did get it. They loved the movie probably for the same reasons I do - I could relate.

    I've never been through the experiences that the protagonist Charlie Edwards has, but I have certainly felt trapped and like my life was no longer my own. I think we all have and in the end I think that is why "Bondage" succeeeds.
    10FilmPerson23

    Breaks Convention

    I saw this movie while I was at South By Southwest. What particularly intrigued me about it was the fact that asked a lot of questions and answered none of them. You rarely see that anymore. Most movies, even the independents, will give the audience some sense that all of the questions have answers and that the conclusions to people's dilemmas are satisfying to anyone sitting in a dark room eating popcorn.

    Don't get me wrong, I like going to the movies and I like a lot of what I see. I work a 9 to 5 job and a lot of the time I just want to watch mindless comforting good old fashioned entertainment.

    But that's not all I want to see. Somethings I enjoy a movie with characters and themes that I can empathathize with on some level, a story that is making observations that no one else is making. Bondage did that for me. It showed a different side of the American dream. It's a movie that dares to show what happens when everything breaks down, who pays (the next generation) and how that cycle perpetuates itself.

    That alone is interesting enough, but it also serves as an allegory for what is happening in the world today. I'm not an independent film snob by any means. Most of them are boring actually. I really liked Titanic when it came out. But what I liked about Titanic, besides all of the obvious stuff, is what I like about Bondage. Both movies are saying something bigger than what they appear to be saying.

    Titanic says that if we get big enough and arrogant enough we will become vulnerable and this could sink the whole ship. If the ship sinks, most of us are going down. Clearly that movie is talking about America.

    Bondage does the same thing, but in a much different way. Bondage not only gets into the private lives, yearnings, secrets, regrets and longings (to be free of something) of each of its characters, but it also seems to be asking a much bigger question. And I think that question is what makes it almost a cautionary tale (like Titanic). The question is, "What are we, as a society of civilized people, doing here? What are we ignoring? What is the loose thread that can unravel the whole garment?" I found the interview with the director and cast very interesting at the end because the director, who also wrote the script, was talking about this. It was as though the movie had set out to take the temperature of an entire nation and hold up the thermometer. I will not be surprised, when this movie is in theaters, if some people look at that thermometer and don't like what they see. I've read some of these posts and I can already see the desire on the part of some people to attempt to kill the messenger because they don't like the news he brings.

    Bondage is a story worth telling and it is well told. It is rich and entertaining, darkly funny at times, unbearably sad at others, engaging the whole way and sometimes even hard to watch. If it were out, I would have gone to see it again by now. It's just one of those films that stays with you.
    8phoenix-82

    Great storytelling

    I really liked this movie; it excels in telling the story of one young man's humanity, contrasted with the inhumanity of the correctional system. You become immersed in the life of Charlie, and you start to make the voyage through the film with him. As you begin trying to understand everything going on in his life, you contrast it to a system that does not see people as individuals. A system the judges people's character based upon flawed and superficial measurements.

    Superb acting was essential to telling the story, and the cast did a fantastic job. There are many shots in the film that rely heavily on the facial expression of Charlie, and Michael Angarano delivered.

    I think the cinematography really fit the film as well. The use of lighting, colors and shots always seemed appropriate, and really was consistent with the overall vision.

    In short, storytelling is often times a lost art, but Bondage did a great job at telling us a story. It gives the audience the chance to walk in someone else's shoes for a few hours, and learn from their experience. I really enjoyed that experience.

    -E
    8superjxiv

    Do yourself a favor and just see it.

    I was lucky enough to see the world premiere of this film at SXSW just the other day. I knew little about the movie but wanted at least one screening under my belt at an actual film festival. The screening was in the morning, so I ended up talking about it to everyone around me the rest of the day. It's been the highlight of the trip, other than meeting the cast and director.

    In the opening moments of Bondage, a first time feature for directer Eric Allen Bell, young Charlie Edwards is arrested for vandalism and arson. The corrections industry in California is uninterested in addressing his emotional trauma; they just want to store his body for the course of his four year sentence. To escape the harassment of the gangs and the corrections officers, Charlie feigns insanity and moves to a psychiatric hospital. The doctors push drugs on top of drugs to nullify everything in Charlie's world. And all Charlie wants for himself is to live his own life without the oppressive rules made up by other people.

    The narrative flexes the sequence of events, seamlessly incorporating past, present and future moments into a coherent storyline. There are moments when the film explores the tactics Charlie's parents would use to enforce their standards of control, including a particularly harrowing sequence where they drag him into the bathroom and force his hands to scrub out the tub as he pleads for mercy. A character late in the film makes this observation: parents who box their teen into a corner with rules and emotional manipulation are so shocked when he comes out fighting, it's no wonder they call him crazy.

    Michael Angarano in the role of Charlie had a formidable task carrying the film, and he excels at giving the character a sense of tragedy. By mere body posture and softly spoken lines, we see Charlie as a damaged and frightened person, who understands little about why he's so deeply interred in a system that cares little for his well being. Illeana Douglas and Eric Lange as Charlie's parents are haunting with the complexity they bring to what is essentially the forces of old and evil. The film does not forgive them, but it creates in them real people, who do both wonderful and terrible things. Just like Charlie. It would be an oversight not to mention the adorable Mae Whitman as another product of an abusive home. Her character may have the least amount of screen time, but her impact on the film's final thirty minutes could be felt for hours after the credits rolled.

    There's a famous poem by Phil Larkin called "This Be The Verse." It ran through my head the entire time I sat in the theater. IMDb won't allow me to post it here due to the expletives it contains, but it's not hard to find after a quick search on Google.

    Go see this movie.

    • Jon
    10romonthone

    Incredible

    "The Bondage" by Eric Allen Bell has one of the best endings to a movie I think I have ever seen. If you have not seen this movie, see it. This is incredible. It's available for download on a bunch of sites. The storyline is amazing. I could not stop myself watching the movie until the very ending. Every single scene of this movie was amazing to watch, and the best part was the ending. I think it really exposes the horrific juvenile justice system. And the industry built up around medicating kids instead of looking at other factors, like their horrible parents. Every parent of a teenager needs to see this film. It is from first time film director Eric Allen Bell.

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    Related interests

    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Quotes

      Charlie: So, what are you in here for?

      Vincent: Kind of a tacky question, isn't it? I stabbed a woman 87 times.

      Charlie: What did you do that for?

      Vincent: I don't know.

    • Alternate versions
      There is a Director's Cut

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 2006 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Bondage
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Roark Media
      • Ithaka Entertainment
      • Relief Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $1,700,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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