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The Informers

  • 2008
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Brad Renfro in The Informers (2008)
A multi-strand narrative set in early 1980s Los Angeles, centered on an array of characters who represent both the top of the heap and the bottom of the hill.
Play trailer1:55
2 Videos
39 Photos
Psychological DramaCrimeDramaThriller

One week in L.A. in 1983, featuring movie executives, rock stars, a vampire and other morally challenged characters in adventures laced with sex, drugs and violence.One week in L.A. in 1983, featuring movie executives, rock stars, a vampire and other morally challenged characters in adventures laced with sex, drugs and violence.One week in L.A. in 1983, featuring movie executives, rock stars, a vampire and other morally challenged characters in adventures laced with sex, drugs and violence.

  • Director
    • Gregor Jordan
  • Writers
    • Bret Easton Ellis
    • Nicholas Jarecki
  • Stars
    • Billy Bob Thornton
    • Kim Basinger
    • Mickey Rourke
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gregor Jordan
    • Writers
      • Bret Easton Ellis
      • Nicholas Jarecki
    • Stars
      • Billy Bob Thornton
      • Kim Basinger
      • Mickey Rourke
    • 105User reviews
    • 97Critic reviews
    • 20Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    The Informers: Greenband Trailer
    Trailer 1:55
    The Informers: Greenband Trailer
    The Informers: Trailer
    Trailer 1:50
    The Informers: Trailer
    The Informers: Trailer
    Trailer 1:50
    The Informers: Trailer

    Photos38

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    Top cast44

    Edit
    Billy Bob Thornton
    Billy Bob Thornton
    • William Sloan
    Kim Basinger
    Kim Basinger
    • Laura Sloan
    Mickey Rourke
    Mickey Rourke
    • Peter
    Jon Foster
    Jon Foster
    • Graham Sloan
    Austin Nichols
    Austin Nichols
    • Martin
    Amber Heard
    Amber Heard
    • Christie
    Lou Taylor Pucci
    Lou Taylor Pucci
    • Tim
    Fernando Consagra
    • Bruce
    Aaron Himelstein
    Aaron Himelstein
    • Raymond…
    Mel Raido
    Mel Raido
    • Bryan
    Rhys Ifans
    Rhys Ifans
    • Roger
    Germán Tripel
    Germán Tripel
    • Bryan's Guitarist
    • (as German Tripel)
    Brad Renfro
    Brad Renfro
    • Jack…
    Winona Ryder
    Winona Ryder
    • Cheryl Moore
    Suzanne Ford
    Suzanne Ford
    • Bruce's Mother
    Cameron Goodman
    Cameron Goodman
    • Susan…
    Angela Sarafyan
    Angela Sarafyan
    • Mary
    Chris Isaak
    Chris Isaak
    • Les Price
    • Director
      • Gregor Jordan
    • Writers
      • Bret Easton Ellis
      • Nicholas Jarecki
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews105

    4.917.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6Rodrigo_Amaro

    It was okay! But behold, there's trouble ahead.

    It's kind of strange to explain why I liked this film. Maybe it was the ensemble casting united; or maybe it's because I tend to enjoy hyper-linked stories where unconnected situations and characters will connect with each other at the ending; I really don't know. Or more important, perhaps I didn't find reasons enough to dislike it even though there were plenty of them.

    Bret Easton Ellis adapts his own novel into the screen and even though I haven't read the book I believe this is somewhat well adapted, very close to his style of writing and characters presentations and inconclusive endings to some of them. The story presented has several characters (played by Billy Bob Thornton, Kim Basinger, Jon Foster, Lou Taylor Pucci, Winona Ryder, Brad Renfro, Mickey Rourke, Chris Isaak, Rhys Ifans among others) messing up with their lives while trying to figure out a meaning to it. It all takes place in the 1980's (as usual with Ellis works) and it does involve sex, drugs and rock n'roll.

    The problem with "The Informers" is that it is a movie that doesn't have a heart or it just doesn't beat enough, by that I mean that you leave the experience without getting much except the reunion of a good cast giving average performances. We're thrown with these characters, know few things about them, then the story tries to conclude something but not enough to let us take our own conclusions of why they do what they do. For instance, the story involving the kid and his father on vacation trying to get to know each other where the father tries to communicate with his son who knows that this is impossible, since they have nothing in common. It only gives innuendos about the boy's sexuality, some sort of confusion and in the end we kept wondering what was that all about. There's something there that could be explored more, the script never answered what needed to be answered so the bond with its audience is a little inexistent.

    The weakest aspect of all is that it doesn't look the 80's, it's too much 2000's, it's too updated. To have an good example of recreating an decade years later and also a film based on Ellis novel, "American Psycho" was infinitely better not only the story but also bringing the 1980's back with their colors, the loud music (and of great quality), the pop culture references. In "The Informers" it's only a music here and there or a TV report about the AIDS that inform us that we are in another decade.

    This melancholic tale about ill fated characters living as a lost generation has its good moments. It's a good film, it never leaves you uninterested or bored or angry. It's main difficulty is a script that doesn't dig a little deeper and rarely gives some powerful insights about how troubled was the 1980's even with everything going in your favor like the characters presented here, all rich and beautiful but miserably sad. 6/10
    Benedict_Cumberbatch

    It's shiny, it's sleazy, but it's no Easton Ellis

    I had good expectations about "The Informers". Being a fan of Bret Easton Ellis' writing, knowing that he co-wrote the script himself, and with a cast that includes names like Billy Bob Thornton and Mickey Rourke, it had everything to be a new cult favourite, right? Wrong. I'm not familiar with Gregor Jordan's previous work ("Two Hands", "Buffalo Soldiers"), and given his speech before the film première at Sundance on January 22nd, I don't doubt his good intentions about this project. Unfortunately, a good movie isn't made just of good intentions. As in most of Ellis' work, the protagonists are a bunch of shallow, pretty rich kids (Jon Foster, Lou Taylor Pucci, Amber Heard, among others) and their just as shallow elderly peers/parents (Kim Basinger, who played Foster's lover in "The Door in the Floor", now plays his mother, who's depressed because of her husband's – Billy Bob Thornton – affair with the confused newswoman terribly played by Winona Ryder; less serious is Chris Isaak as Pucci's womanizing father, who seemed to have fun playing his character), in 1983 Los Angeles.

    Jordan said during the Q&A that this is a movie about Los Angeles, and that Robert Altman's "Short Cuts" was an inspiration for it. It's light years away from the depth, originality and brilliance of "Short Cuts", though. Jordan doesn't know how to direct this sort of material; it pales in comparison to Mary Harron's insanely secure hand over "American Psycho", also based on an Ellis novel. "The Informers" doesn't even engage the audience like the flawed, but fairly entertaining "The Rules of Attraction". It tries too hard to be a cool movie and fails, almost always, miserably. The overall acting is pretty mediocre, although Isaak and Pucci bring some life to their characters. Foster, who was great in "The Door in the Floor", shows that he's not yet ready to play a lead (and he didn't even have to carry the movie on his shoulders à la Christian Bale; this is a big ensemble where nobody really stands out, and I'm including a pre-Wrestler Mickey Rourke and the late Brad Renfro, who plays the perhaps only likable character, in the list).

    Jordan said Ellis was afraid to show up for the movie première at Sundance, probably predicting the criticism that was to come. I don't blame him (and I feel for Jordan too since you gotta respect someone who has the guts to face the honor - and pressure - of having your movie premiering at Sundance). Although nobody was impolite during the Q&A, the movie got trashed by the critics afterwards.

    I have no idea how well this is gonna do at the box office, although Amber Heard's constant nudity will certainly catch some attention and give her lots of job offers (too bad her acting skills are still rather poor). I wouldn't call "The Informers" a terrible movie, just a very forgettable one. The final scene (not the conclusion, but the very final scene itself) is disturbing, sad and yes, memorable; but by then you feel like you wasted too much time with something that's been done several times, and much better, before. 4/10.
    3hall895

    Incoherent, depressing mess

    Past film adaptations of Bret Easton Ellis novels have been well received. So, with Ellis on board as screenwriter, you could see where stars like Billy Bob Thornton, Kim Basinger, Mickey Rourke and Winona Ryder would have been attracted to The Informers. Unfortunately for all involved, including Ellis who would pretty much disown the movie after its release, the script was handed to director Gregor Jordan. And Jordan made a complete mess of it. He wanted to take things in a darker direction. Well, he succeeded in making it dark. He didn't succeed in anything else. He ended up making a truly awful movie.

    The film unfolds in early 1980s Los Angeles. It's a sex, drugs and rock and roll story. For brevity's sake, let's just say that everyone is sleeping with everyone else. That's pretty much accurate. It's an ensemble piece with a whole bunch of characters, none of whom you actually end up caring about. All these characters have their own stories which are in some cases loosely intertwined, in some cases not intertwined at all and thus ultimately pointless. Thornton and Basinger just mail in their performances, they're totally lifeless. Rourke's character is a waste of time, he's only in one of those completely pointless subplots. Ryder really has only a bit part. These older stars may draw the attention but the film's story focuses more on the younger generation. Nobody in this younger crowd stands out as being particularly interesting, none of the performances rise above the mundane. They have some sex, then we cut back to one of the other story lines, then we come back to them again and they have more sex. If nothing else at least Amber Heard, playing a young woman who gets passed around like a used handkerchief, looks spectacular. So there's that.

    The only character who comes across as truly sympathetic is a young doorman, Jack, played by Brad Renfro. If any performer comes away from this film with any credit at all it's Renfro, playing a guy struggling to deal with the shady doings of his uncle, the Rourke character. Unfortunately Renfro's performance largely goes for naught as this story really doesn't tie into the main plot at all. Honestly though saying this film has a main plot is probably giving it too much credit. There is no real story tying this thing together. Too much time is wasted on characters who serve no purpose. There's a drugged-out rock singer who likes to sleep with young girls. There's a guy on the world's most awkward vacation in Hawaii with his dad. What do these characters have to do with anything? Nothing. Nothing at all. The film is just a jumbled, largely incoherent, mess. And then it just ends. No resolution. All these stories, no endings. On the one hand you're grateful it's over because you certainly don't want to watch this film any longer. On the other hand you're left feeling insulted that you wasted any time at all watching this pointless film which was ultimately going nowhere.
    6tzybura

    Sex, Drugs and Rockin' Roll = Destruction

    Acting was superb but the film was a LOT darker then I expected it to be. My expectations were way off going in. I thought it would be an upbeat film with some edgy scenes and instead I felt like I was living the roller-coaster life of an addict for 2 hours. I feel I am a pretty opened minded person but I think the sex and drugs were over the top and there was enough for 10 films put together. I would have liked to know the characters a little more. It would have been nice to have a little more dialog and less pulls from the bottle, hits form the bong, and group sex scenes. I never felt really connected to any of the characters and I only felt sad for them. I walked out of the theater feeling icky and little depressed so I would not see it again or recommend it.
    6Jonny_Numb

    Informers: Revenge of the Sullen

    In terms of both faithfulness to their source material and sheer entertainment value, the adaptations of Bret Easton Ellis's notoriously difficult, notoriously nihilistic novels have improved exponentially. Granted, these are tales that (on the surface, at least) do little more than add a smattering of sex, violence, drugs, and general bad behavior to the lives of blonde, vacant teenagers growing up spoiled rotten in the 1980s. Film has come a long way toward "understanding" (if such a thing is possible) and transferring Ellis's stock and trade into something cinematic. Directed by Gregor Jordan (whose name even seems pulled from the author's pages), "The Informers" is as scattered as its source (the screenplay was co-written by Ellis), with barely the bare bones of a cohesive plot–events are only really "connected" by the repeat appearances of its bored, oversexed, and/or strung out protagonists. In a very odd way, I was reminded of Terry Gilliam's "Tideland," a recent example of a film where the viewer's best response is to be swept along unquestioningly by the events that transpire, regardless of how ridiculous or bizarre they may be; "The Informers" begins awkwardly, giving only cursory introductions to barely-distinguishable characters, but eventually affects a lyrical rhythm of its own–Jordan composes countless shots of stunning beauty that are also (quite paradoxically) void of any semblance of humanity. True to Ellis, the characters are sad, pathetic, sadistic, and–above all–lost, searching for a deeper meaning that their hedonistic lifestyle keeps them from attaining. While lacking the biting wit of Ellis's work, "The Informers" will likely connect with the author's niche fans; others will find it as empty and nihilistic and pointless as its characters (which, as several note near the end, is the point exactly).

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Brad Renfro, who played Jack, considered giving up acting before he was cast in this film. It would ultimately become his final role, with the film being released shortly after his death.
    • Goofs
      When Peter shows Jack the child in the van, a crew member can be seen through the windshield looking in. He tries to get out of the way, but does not succeed.
    • Quotes

      Graham Sloan: What are you trying to tell me, baby? What are you saying?

      Christie: I want... I want to stay.

      Graham Sloan: But it's getting cold.

      Christie: But I need more sun.

      Graham Sloan: There's no more sun.

    • Connections
      Edited into The Rotten Tomatoes Show: 17 Again/State of Play/Crank High Voltage (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      New Gold Dream (81/82/83/84)
      Written by Jim Kerr (as James Kerr), Charlie Burchill (as Charles Burchill), Derek Forbes and Michael McNeil

      Performed by Simple Minds

      Courtesy Virgin Records Ltd.

      Under license from EMI Film & Television Music

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 24, 2009 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Germany
    • Official sites
      • MySpace
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Informers
    • Filming locations
      • Buenos Aires, Federal District, Argentina
    • Production company
      • Senator Entertainment Co
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $18,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $300,000
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $300,000
      • Apr 26, 2009
    • Gross worldwide
      • $382,174
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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