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Choke

  • 2008
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
35K
YOUR RATING
Choke (2008)
This is the theatrical trailer for Choke, directed by Clark Gregg.
Play trailer2:10
14 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyComedyDrama

A sex-addicted con-man pays for his mother's hospital bills by playing on the sympathies of those who rescue him from choking to death.A sex-addicted con-man pays for his mother's hospital bills by playing on the sympathies of those who rescue him from choking to death.A sex-addicted con-man pays for his mother's hospital bills by playing on the sympathies of those who rescue him from choking to death.

  • Director
    • Clark Gregg
  • Writers
    • Clark Gregg
    • Chuck Palahniuk
  • Stars
    • Sam Rockwell
    • Anjelica Huston
    • Kelly Macdonald
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    35K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Clark Gregg
    • Writers
      • Clark Gregg
      • Chuck Palahniuk
    • Stars
      • Sam Rockwell
      • Anjelica Huston
      • Kelly Macdonald
    • 87User reviews
    • 149Critic reviews
    • 47Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos14

    Choke: Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:10
    Choke: Theatrical Trailer
    Choke
    Clip 0:51
    Choke
    Choke
    Clip 0:51
    Choke
    Choke
    Clip 1:07
    Choke
    Choke
    Clip 0:39
    Choke
    Choke
    Clip 1:04
    Choke
    Choke
    Clip 0:32
    Choke

    Photos121

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Sam Rockwell
    Sam Rockwell
    • Victor Mancini
    Anjelica Huston
    Anjelica Huston
    • Ida J. Mancini
    Kelly Macdonald
    Kelly Macdonald
    • Paige Marshall
    Kathryn Alexander
    • Mousy Girl…
    Teodorina Bello
    • Jamaican Lady
    Kate Blumberg
    • Edwin's Wife
    Jonah Bobo
    Jonah Bobo
    • Young Victor
    Willi Burke
    • Deranged Socialite
    • (as Wilma 'Willi' Burke)
    Heather Burns
    Heather Burns
    • Internet Date…
    David Fonteno
    David Fonteno
    • Edwin
    Matt Gerald
    Matt Gerald
    • Detective Ryan
    Clark Gregg
    Clark Gregg
    • Lord High Charlie
    Joel Grey
    Joel Grey
    • Phil
    Viola Harris
    Viola Harris
    • Eva Muller
    Brad William Henke
    Brad William Henke
    • Denny
    Paz de la Huerta
    Paz de la Huerta
    • Nico
    • (as Paz De La Huerta)
    Michelle Hurst
    Michelle Hurst
    • Shapely Nurse
    Gillian Jacobs
    Gillian Jacobs
    • Cherry Daiquiri…
    • Director
      • Clark Gregg
    • Writers
      • Clark Gregg
      • Chuck Palahniuk
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews87

    6.434.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7rrh87

    Pretty entertaining flick...

    This is actually a review from someone who read the novel before watching, and since I'm sure anyone interested in this movie have had watched or read Choke novel or Fight Club, I won't make a synopsis of the film.

    I'm going to start with the cons: I gave this movie a 7 out of 10 mainly because of its cinematography; there was zero creativity involved in it. From start to finish, you never get to see and let alone appreciate the surroundings in which the characters are. With this lack of creativeness, it seemed like the environment from every scene was a cheap set and not actual places. There's no introduction to the city in which Victor (the protagonist) lives, his work, the "mental facility", etc.

    This leaves the movie with full of dullness and no life to it, switching from one scene to the next with just the actors interacting with one another with no pleasant detail to it. Some scenes could have been better OR longer (for example; the first choke scene in the restaurant), although nice, it seemed pretty rushed. And talking about longer scenes comes my third con: its length. This movie is almost 1hr and half and I'm sure if they made it at least 2hrs long it could have been better, but that's just my opinion.

    The jokes are pretty faithful to the novel and most of them will at least manage to get a chuckle out of you. The protagonist sometimes narrate some scenes a la Fight Club which is a nice touch. The acting is very good and Sam Rockwell perfectly portrayed Victor Mancini as the reckless sex addict. Brad William Henke (Denny) seemed out of place in this movie, since his true character should have been skinny instead of tall and bulked. Same thing with Victor's mom Ida Mancini (Anjelica Huston) which they portrayed her kind of healthy instead of a sick, skinny woman.

    Finally, the movie is very good and entertaining with its dark humor, but it seriously lack in the cinematography and length department.
    8mreed1

    A movie a mature audience will enjoy

    Chuck Palahniuk appeals to a younger audience? I thought this movie was very well written, very well acted and dark and disturbing. I will add this book to my must read.

    I guess I'm a Sam Rockwell fan, and the reason I desperately wanted to watch this movie and it was only after watching it did I realize this was based on a book. The movie stands alone very well. I just can't stop thinking about it. I never believed Victor (Sam Rockwell) to be a disgusting human being, I saw him as flawed, horribly flawed, misunderstood, imperfect and what else can you expect when your mother was completely insane.

    I thought Choke was a phenomenal movie, with amazing depth of character and insight about mental illness. Victor is a sex addict, so there is an awful lot of sex in the movie - if this bothers you, then do not bother. You will need an open mind to enjoy this movie.

    The comments here on IMDb are extremely disappointing, so please do not bother reading them.
    6Wolf30x

    Not sure how to feel about it

    This movie left me in a strangely ambivalent state after I watched it, because I'm not sure if I'm judging it on its actual merits, or my expectations. Having been a fan of Chuck Palahniuk's novel, I was expecting something brash, frenetic and perfectly offensive, but in a good way. The problem is that while the novel was blunt and vulgar, spelling out every bit of Victor Mancini's sexual exploits in almost academic detail, the movie stops a bit short of pushing the edge and instead leaves a lot of it up to suggestion.

    Another reason that I'm not sure how I felt about it is because the director took a unique approach to the work that I'm still trying to decide if I liked or not. You see, Chuck Palahniuk's novels have a very distinctive narrative style to them, and in Fight Club (also based on one of Chuck's books,) director David Fincher emulated it perfectly. I'm talking mostly about Chuck's usage of repetition with lines such as "I am Jack's colon," Choke's director, Clark Gregg chose not to emulate this and instead brought the text of the book to life without mimicking it's distinctive narrative. So if you're a fan of Chuck's work, this may bother you. On the other hand, it does help Choke stand out on its own merits and not feel like it's trying to build off of the success of Fight Club.

    So for those of you who haven't read the book, how does it stand? Well as I said before, considering how much more graphic and indecent this movie's source material was, I think the movie missed out on a lot of its potential. I almost feel like Clark Gregg went too easy on all of the characters making them come off as sympathetic when they worked better as being completely hopeless. It's also not as funny as it could have been, since a lot of Victor's (the protagonist's) interactions with everybody from the sex addicts, to the people in the historic reenactment village to the people he pretends to choke for, were all summarized too much, and had much more potential for comedy. Overall i'd say this movie is alright, but could have been done better.
    7loganx-2

    Chewed The Book, Swallow The Movie?

    The only Chuck P. book I own. It's a very funny book, about lust and salvation, and here it is on screen in...pretty good form. That is to say I was a little disappointed, with the ending in particular, which strikes a very different tone (not terrible, just different)....but that's neither here nor there.

    Choke is the story of Victor, med-school dropout who takes care of his 70's radical mom now suffering from dementia and dying after years of drug use and mental instability. In order to pay for her upkeep, Victor pulls double duty at his two jobs, one as an employee at a Colonial American theme park, and two, choking on food in restaurant, so that those who save his life, will feel obligated to help him out with cash from time to time. Who would save someone's life, only to let them die, once you know their sad penniless (over exaggerated) story? Victor targets the wealthy and affluent, "You don't wanna get saved by some waiter", he says in one of many direct addresses to the audience. The broken 4th wall, reminiscent of Fight Club, is taken directly from the book, and one of the films stronger techniques.

    In the hospital he meets, a young doctor, who assists him in translating his mother's diary, which leads to shocking questions about Victor's origins, and his father or lack there of.

    Victor goes to sex addict meetings usually just to have sex in the bathroom with fellow addicts. While his best friend Denny, a chronic masturbator, begins taking his first shaky steps to recover, which involves romancing a Stripper and collecting rocks for each day his sobriety, "idle hands are the devils playground". The sex addiction and the need to save his mom, are the twin turbines that propel this film, and by the end they are both so clearly intertwined it escapes being exploitative.

    I enjoyed this version of Choke, which was kinda of like Choke-Light, but still very funny, if only slightly missing the aim of the novel; the heady and vulgar mix of the sacred and the profane. That is to say, important sub-plots, and main-plot points get muted; we know why Victor chokes, there are more reasons than I stated above, but we don't get to see the people who fund his faints here, as we do in the book, and so that aspect of the story, seems a little disconnected. As do Denny and the rocks, another vital story element for me, got put on the back-burner here. Denny replaces one fetish with another, and most of the rooms of his house are filled with rocks.

    (Actually they shot this ending, you can see pictures online, but decided against it, before release.) Okay, but everyone always says the book is better than the movie, I know, I know, I just had to get that out.

    What's left of Choke though is commanded by Sam Rockwell, who is only improving as an actor, and Angelica Houston who needs no intro. While it's not as conceptually taught as I would have liked, its still really, really funny, and at a few moments, a bit moving (Ive got a personal soft spot for movies with visits to the demented in hospitals; The Savages is especially hard to watch), at least for me.

    It's an allegorical sex comedy, but it's also a very accessible one, considering the weirdness of the material. It's a more personal story than "Fight Club", and almost an opposite ideology, "building anything", versus "tearing down everything", but told in the same sardonic writerly tone, weave come to expect from Palahniuk.

    In the end, I just wanted more, but it was fun, and the story was brought to life, mostly just as I had imagined it when reading.

    Also it's got the funniest and perhaps the only funny, "rape" scene, ever filmed (it is and it's not what it sounds like).
    9pyrocitor

    Worth digesting slowly

    Few authors have as instantly distinctive a style as Chuck Palahniuk: simply look for the most convoluted, scathingly hilarious, disturbingly filthy and twisted narratives which somehow prove revelatory of strikingly genuine nuggets of human nature, usually the ones we would rather keep hidden. Perhaps for this reason, with the exception of his enormous cult hit Fight Club, Palahniuk's work has seldom been adapted for the big screen, with movie executives likely preferring to work with plots which they can be sure their viewers will understand, and not result in heart attacks from either repulsion or outrage. As such, writer/director Clark Gregg's adaptation of Palahniuk's Choke is a daring move - after all, how often does one see the tale of a sardonic sex-addict playing on the sympathies of those who save him from choking to death in restaurants to pay for his mother's hospital bills gracing the marquees? And yet, as surprising as it may seem, for all of the caustically humorous overtones, at the heart of Choke lies a surprisingly tender and fascinatingly complex character study, brimming with humanity and pathos... and yes, loads of gratuitous sex on the side.

    Those expecting more along the lines of Fight Club's nihilistic social commentary and brutal violence may find themselves disappointed, as Choke's sordid portrait of a man so used to mindlessly numbing his pain coming to terms with his flaws and potential for good almost by accident proves a far more sympathetic look, albeit one with graphic and perverse sexual content. That being said, writer/director Gregg's screenplay is a razor sharp medley of slashing Palahniuk wit and biting one-liners as well as surprisingly poignant character revelations, blending an increasingly eclectic myriad of events into an impressively concise (the film runs only 89 minutes) yet still cohesive storyline. If a flaw is to be found, it lies in the film's ending, which flirts which but mercifully avoids succumbing to convention and provides what may be one plot twist too many, making the finale somewhat unnecessarily cluttered (and yet strangely fitting) but in such an impressively unique work, such minute concerns are easily forgiven.

    One of the film's many blessings is the casting of the supremely talented Sam Rockwell as Victor Mancini, the sort of lead role he is far too often deprived of. It is a testament to Rockwell's immense skill and charisma that he manages not only to sympathize a character who ultimately sets out to make himself dislikeable but also evokes both hilarity and pathos in the least likely places, delivering one of the most remarkable performances in recent memory. Similarly, Angelica Huston is incendiary as Mancini's mother (in flashbacks shown to be an even less stable parent before her dementia) and her interactions with her son prove surprisingly poignant and emotionally wrenching. The tremendously likable Brad William Henke raises many a laugh as Mancini's similarly sex-addicted best friend, and Kelly Macdonald gives a quirky but charming performance as the doctor who may, despite Mancini's best efforts, end up being a love interest. Director Gregg has a hilarious supporting role as the earnest head of Victor's collonial historical interpreter site, and Jonah Bobo proves a rising talent to watch as Victor's childhood self.

    Darkly hilarious, sublimely subversive and yet hiding surprising pathos and heart, Choke proves one of the most offbeat films of the year, and is all the more entertaining for it. While the film is without question not for everyone, those willing to stomach the acerbic and often disturbing humour and hefty sexual content may discover one of the most darkly enjoyable movie experiences of quite some time.

    -9/10

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Chuck Palahniuk: the author of the book, is the man sitting next to Victor on the plane at the end of the movie.
    • Goofs
      When Victor is attempting to feed his mother cannelloni in their first meeting scene, the camera changes angle and she is not wearing the napkins he previously placed under her chin. When the camera moves back to another angle the napkins have miraculously returned.
    • Quotes

      Victor Mancini: We are not born equal sinners, or perfect knock-offs of God. The world tells us whether we're heroes or victims. But, we can decide for ourselves.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 187: Choke and Junk Mail (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Reckoner
      Written by Thom Yorke (as Thomas Yorke), Jonny Greenwood (as Jonathan Greenwood),

      Colin Greenwood, Ed O'Brien (as Edward O'Brien) and Phil Selway (as Philip Selway)

      Performed by Radiohead

      Under license from Warner/Chappell Music LTD

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    FAQ22

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 21, 2009 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Lời Khó Nói
    • Filming locations
      • Essex County Hospital Center - 204 Grove Avenue, Cedar Grove, New Jersey, USA
    • Production companies
      • Fox Searchlight Pictures
      • ATO Pictures
      • Contrafilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,926,565
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,319,286
      • Sep 28, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,982,459
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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