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Fragments

Original title: Winged Creatures
  • 2008
  • R
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
7.6K
YOUR RATING
Kate Beckinsale, Guy Pearce, Forest Whitaker, and Dakota Fanning in Fragments (2008)
Coming Soon trailer for the DVD release of Fragments
Play trailer2:31
2 Videos
15 Photos
CrimeDrama

A group of strangers form a unique relationship with each other after surviving a random shooting at a Los Angeles diner.A group of strangers form a unique relationship with each other after surviving a random shooting at a Los Angeles diner.A group of strangers form a unique relationship with each other after surviving a random shooting at a Los Angeles diner.

  • Director
    • Rowan Woods
  • Writer
    • Roy Freirich
  • Stars
    • Kate Beckinsale
    • Forest Whitaker
    • Guy Pearce
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    7.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rowan Woods
    • Writer
      • Roy Freirich
    • Stars
      • Kate Beckinsale
      • Forest Whitaker
      • Guy Pearce
    • 41User reviews
    • 30Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    DVD Trailer: Fragments
    Trailer 2:31
    DVD Trailer: Fragments
    Fragments
    Clip 1:08
    Fragments
    Fragments
    Clip 1:08
    Fragments

    Photos15

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    Top cast59

    Edit
    Kate Beckinsale
    Kate Beckinsale
    • Carla Davenport
    Forest Whitaker
    Forest Whitaker
    • Charlie Archenault
    Guy Pearce
    Guy Pearce
    • Dr. Bruce Laraby
    Dakota Fanning
    Dakota Fanning
    • Anne Hagen
    Jeanne Tripplehorn
    Jeanne Tripplehorn
    • Doris Hagen
    Embeth Davidtz
    Embeth Davidtz
    • Joan Laraby
    Troy Garity
    Troy Garity
    • Ron Abler
    Josh Hutcherson
    Josh Hutcherson
    • Jimmy Jaspersen
    Jackie Earle Haley
    Jackie Earle Haley
    • Bob Jaspersen
    Robin Weigert
    Robin Weigert
    • Lydia Jasperson
    Jennifer Hudson
    Jennifer Hudson
    • Kathy Hammet
    Tim Guinee
    Tim Guinee
    • Aaron Hagen
    Marty Maguire
    • Gunman
    Hayley McFarland
    Hayley McFarland
    • Lori Carline
    James Le Gros
    James Le Gros
    • Dr. Dan Howland
    • (as James LeGros)
    Randall Park
    Randall Park
    • Resident
    Kent Shocknek
    Kent Shocknek
    • Hospital Reporter
    Lu Parker
    Lu Parker
    • Hospital Reporter #2
    • Director
      • Rowan Woods
    • Writer
      • Roy Freirich
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews41

    5.67.5K
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    Featured reviews

    4Chris_Docker

    Doesn't quite take flight

    A popular place to die in America is sitting in a diner. I only know this because of countless movies where people go into a diner, ostensibly for a cup of coffee, but basically so they can get shot. You think I'm kidding. They don't really go into diners to get shot. They go into diners so they can be immortalised in movies when they get shot. Remembered by millions. Either way, they get shot, and hopefully something else happens to make it interesting.

    Fragments follows the lives of various people after one such incident in a diner. One woman becomes obsessively promiscuous. One man is convinced he has a miraculous power of luck at the casino tables. One teenager becomes obsessed with born-again Christianity. Another stops speaking. 24/7. The life of the waitress in the diner. The man who held the door open on the way out and let the killer in. Everyone is affected in different ways. Beneath the placid exteriors there is deep sorrow needing to come out.

    At least that's the story. It is, unfortunately, only mildly interesting. Both the youngsters are played by charismatic individuals. Forest Whitaker works overtime to imbue his lamentable character with something worth watching. Kate Beckinsale is easy on the eye, even playing neurotically bedraggled. The list of names goes on, and includes many actors worthy of better material than this.

    We tend in the UK to give bereavement short shrift. An hour or so over cheese and ham sandwiches at the funeral – then like any trauma that goes with it – it's supposed to be over. But although the American tradition is better at giving death its due, it is also more fond of the psychoanalyst's couch. And endlessly obsessing over one's worries. And endlessly expecting us to care. 'Get over it,' is not something a sensitive person would ever think, much less say to a friend. That each of these people eventually find an exit from their vicious cycle of senseless sorrow is more down to the determination to spin it out to feature length and then cut before we wonder what would happen if they had any real problems.

    I would like to be more sympathetic to such navel gazing as eulogised in Fragments. But if the characters are in any way believable, it is very, very sad that they are so. This is an ensemble performance in the psychopathology of feeling over-dramatically sorry for oneself. Of being at the mercy of circumstances. In a frankly tedious, self-indulgent, predictably downward spiral of a film.

    The movie is nicely bookended, starting with scenes of an abandoned kitchen montaged with respectable surburbania. It is meant to convey a suggestion that these horrors happen to 'nice' people too. The treatment of the two iconic US derangements – guns and religion – is refreshingly non-judgemental and manages a balancing act that neither supports nor opposes. The production values are generally good and it has the advantage of being a mainstream weepie that is neither sugary nor patronising towards the audience. The drama is well-paced, and if you can tolerate the storyline there is no reason why you shouldn't effortlessly while away some time in front of it (if my hard-hearted reservations haven't put you off).

    From the viewpoint of dedicated cinema-goers, violence in diners has good and bad points. On the plus side, we get a lot of great movies. Like History of Violence. Or Natural Born Killers. And more gangster films than holes in Al Capone's raincoat. But of course there's sadness too. Subjecting your loved ones to Fragments would be a prime example.
    Gordon-11

    Interesting character study and gives much room for thought

    This film is about how the lives of different individuals are affected by a shooting in a local café.

    "Winged Creatures" is not for everyone as it is a tough film to watch. Though the story is held together by an initial central event, the characters' reactions and coping mechanisms make the film seem fragmented. Maybe that's why the new title of "Winged Creatures" is "Fragments"? Each of the victim's reactions give much room for thought and reflection. Out of all the reactions, I find Dakota Fanning's detached and dissociated state the most dramatic; Kate Beckinsale's reaction is the most realistic; while Guy Pearce's reaction is scarily morbid.

    "Winged Creatures" could have been a thought provoking and touching drama. However, it tries to show so many different characters' reactions that it becomes fragmentary. It would have been more satisfying to just concentrate on less characters but in more detail.
    Chrysanthepop

    Fragmented and Flawed but Still An Interesting Watch

    I love ensemble movies with intertwined plots. I thoroughly enjoyed 'Crash' (even though it was heavily flawed), really liked 'Babel' and 'The Hours', 'Happy Endings' and 'Magnolia' are among my favourites. Even though 'Winged Creatures' (a.k.a. 'Fragments') does not reach the level of the aforementioned movies, it was an interesting watch (better than 'Powder Blue'). The link between the characters' lives is shown in the very first sequence and the stories follow thereafter.

    'Winged Creatures' is a very subtle film. This is both a strength and weakness. There are certain actions that the characters commit the reason of which is understood by the end. However, some of them seem a little too far-fetched and hard to believe. For example, why is Laraby checking up the side-effects of medicines on the Internet when he's an accomplished doctors? Even for someone who's affected by post-traumatic stress disorder (a key theme in the movie), this is a little too out there. It would have been more convincing if the story was more developed and the viewer was allowed to see Laraby's inner struggle. Guy Pearce does a good job. In a small role, Embth Davidtz makes her presence felt.

    The Kate Beckinsale track is quite well-handled. There's a sequence in the film where one can register the disappointment on her face after she was about to answer the reporters' questions when they immediately switch to the family of the dead guy who just walked out of the hospital. This hints Carla's struggle for attention which leads to her promiscuous behaviour and to a form of Munchausen's syndrome such that she deliberately starves her child for the doctor's attention. Beckinsale delivers a first rate performance.

    Jimmy and Anne were two teenagers who were witnesses of the shootout in which Anne's father was murdered. Here there is an uneven balance between drama and subtlety. I found Anne's sudden religious devotion and Jimmy taking the gun to the crime scene (to threaten Anne?) hardly believable and her mother is the typical mom while Jimmy's father is the typical dad who hates shrinks. Jackie Earle Haley and Jeanne Tripplehorn are strictly okay. Dakota Fanning is wooden except in the final scene where she plays by the formula. Troy Garrity is good but the real star here is Josh Hutcherson who draws the viewer with Jimmy's restraint and mental anguish.

    Charlie's storyline is poorly presented. I found the gambling scenes to be repetitive. The scenes of his daughter and the detective could have easily been left out. The prostitute scene was a cliché that has been repeated since 'Leaving Las Vegas'. Forest Whitaker is alright. Jennifer Hudson is forgettable. Marshall Allman shines.

    After the shooting sequence, 'Winged Creatures' initially moves at a sluggish pace. At times , it feels too fragmented because of lack of story development. The execution is pretty ordinary, if anything. The cinematography is flat. The soundtrack is far from outstanding. The film could have used some more editing. Give then plusses and minusses, it is a movie at least worth a one-time watch.
    7claudio_carvalho

    The Aftermath of an Urban Violence

    In an ordinary day, a deranged man has a rampage in a diner and randomly shoots the costumers. The survivors of the tragic episode are deeply affected by the shooting and have the most different reactions: the youngster Anne Hagen (Dakota Fanning) becomes popular at school telling her version of the shooting and shows a great faith on God; her friend Jimmy Jaspersen (Josh Hutcherson) becomes mute and closes himself to the outer world like an autist; the waitress Carla Davenport (Kate Beckinsale) neglects her baby and has a vulgar behavior with men; Dr. Bruce Laraby (Guy Pearce) loses his self-confidence and tries an experimental treatment to the migraine of his wife; and the compulsive gambler Charlie Archenault (Forrest Whitaker) believes that he is lucky in the game and gambles all his money but he has a jinx.

    "Winged Creatures" is a depressing movie about the aftermath of an urban violence that every now and then happens in North America – shooting in a public space. There are rich characters developed in a short running time that deserved a longer time to explain their motives better. The bleak experiment of Dr. Bruce Laraby with his wife is weird and bizarre, and it is hard to understand his motives. Why Carla neglects her baby is also very strange since the viewer does not know her behavior at home before the tragic incident. Charlie deserves his fate since he is an addicted gambler. However the kids Jimmy and Anne are perfectly developed and have the best drama in the story, with a heartbreaking conclusion. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): "O Efeito da Fúria" ("The Effect of the Fury")
    6kosmasp

    Clash

    There are quite a few very good actors in the movie and everyone in it delivers a stellar performance. The story is intriguing enough to hold your attention and be entertaining at the same time. But as another reviewer also stated, it does have a few flaws, that might actually let the movie down for you.

    First of all, you shouldn't start comparing it to "Crash" or other movies (especially because it most likely is only the same as those movies mood-wise), but take it for what it is. Of course many different actors means many different stories to tell. Therefor leaving a few stories with less focus than the other (at least that might be the way you absorb and feel the movie).

    Still, if Drama is your cup (of tea/coffee), than go ahead and give it a try. You can't go completely wrong with that I'd say

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Guy Pearce, who plays the American Doctor Bruce Laraby, was born in England and later moved to Australia. Embeth Davidtz, who played his British wife Joan Laraby, was born in the United States.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Anne Hagen: In the ordinary world we trust in where things belong. Everything has a place, and believing in that makes us innocent. And through the days under the same sky we hope, dream, and laugh. We find and loose our way. Endings are beginnings, and moments like pieces fit together again.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Paper Heart/Julie & Julia/A Perfect Getaway/Cold Souls/Fragments (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Ode to Love
      Written by Jody Reynolds

      Performed by Jody Reynolds and Bobbie Gentry

      Courtesy of Lee Silver Productions

      By arrangement with Pigfactory USA LLC

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 26, 2009 (Hong Kong)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Winged Creatures
    • Filming locations
      • Morongo Casino Resort & Spa - 49750 Seminole Drive, Cabazon, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Peace Arch Entertainment Group
      • RGM Entertainment
      • Artina Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $39,171
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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