Downsizing
- 2017
- Tous publics
- 2h 15m
A social satire in which a man realizes he would have a better life if he were to shrink himself to five inches tall, allowing him to live in wealth and splendor.A social satire in which a man realizes he would have a better life if he were to shrink himself to five inches tall, allowing him to live in wealth and splendor.A social satire in which a man realizes he would have a better life if he were to shrink himself to five inches tall, allowing him to live in wealth and splendor.
- Awards
- 1 win & 16 nominations total
- Good Friend Tim
- (as Timothy Edmund Driscoll)
- Buddy Kevin
- (as Kevin Patrick Kunkel)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
But however good (7 stars) this picture might be, lots of people went to see it expecting something entirely different. Just to avoid more frustrations based on the wrong expectations, I have made a short list by which you can check if this movie will annoy you depending on your expactations. You probably WONT be pleased if you are someone who doesnt believe global warming is caused by oil and coal companies that burn fossil fuels in massive quantities. It is though. 98% of the climate scientists say so, based on decades of research. You WONT be pleased either if you are expecting a fun movie with Kristen Wiig because she only performs a meager 10-15 minutes. You WONT be pleased either if you expect a straight story with Matt Damon whom you so admire from his Jason Bourne actionhero movies. Because in "Downsizing" Matt Damon plays a humble and sensitive normal person, who wants to take care of poor and foreign people in need. You WONT be pleased either if you are expecting a funny miniature movie. It is NOT about that at all.
"Downsizing" is ALL about global warming and the dangers it exposes to us as humans. And it is about the choices we can make. It truly is a unique piece of work. Hilarious at only a few moments, because it is not a real comedy. Jokes are made tongue in cheek, in a satirical way. That sort of humor/drama isnt understood by the masses. This movie is really intelligent and heartwarming. But what it really is, is baffling. Because "Downsizing" depicts OUR world. We live in it. We have responsibilities to act upon the dangers global warming exposes our children to. We can choose to make a difference. Or we can stay indifferent.
"Downsizing" is a mirror to our consumer society which runs on oil and coal and if we dont act soon the CO2 emissions will destroy the world as we know it through global warming. I love people who dare hold up mirrors to our society at large. Most people dont like to be told something is wrong with the way we live nowadays however. Alexander Payne is one of the very few directors who dared to try to hold this mirror up to our way of life. I recommend this picture VERY MUCH to all those who DO wanna care about our children's future, who DO wanna care about stopping global warming. These pictures are very rare nowadays, but we need them NOW more than ever before...
It took Alexander Payne 10 years to get this movie made, because the subject of the story is not very popular. It is certainly not his best work, but it is his most RELEVANT one. Because in the end we all have to ask ourselves the question WHAT we can do to guarantee a prosperous and safe future for our very own children and grandchildren. This picture was director Alexander Payne's most personal one. He dedicated it to his late father George, who died on the very day this movie premiered...
At first, the concept was intriguing and compelling. Solve some of the worlds problems with overpopulation and resource straining by allowing people to be "downsized" to approximately 5 inches, or roughly the same size as an action hero doll. There is even a "Truman" style all-encompassing village for them all to live in luxury in downsized mansions that would fit onto a real life dining table.
The leads, Matt Damon and Kristen Wiig, are always bankable for bringing interesting characters to life, and the whole downsizing process for Matt Damon is breathtaking. That all happens in roughly the first half of the movie, but things go downhill fast after Christoph Waltz enters the picture as Matt Damon's obnoxious upstairs neighbor.
First off, earlier scenes show the Matt Damon character, "Paul" taking up residence in one of the Lilliputian mansions with his own yard around it. However, he later appears to live in some type of highrise with elevators without any explanation of why he moved (or maybe I missed it).
By the time the Paul character helps an Asian refugee and ends up visiting the "slum" of the small people neighborhoods to help a disadvantaged small person, I found myself clicking on the screen to see how much of the movie was left. Forty-five minutes? Ugh.
So chalk it up to bad execution or bad scriptwriting, but to me there's little wonder why the movie failed massively at the box office, reaping only a fraction of its production costs, bloated because of the breathtaking special effects from the first half. Eventually, I may see the final 45 minutes since Prime allows you to pick up where you left off, but I certainly won't go out of my way to do it!
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Matt Damon's character, Paul, pulls up to his new downsized home, his driver says; 'welcome to the good life". Paul makes a face in response. "The good life" is the state motto of Nebraska, the home he had just left.
- GoofsWhile the Norwegian colony might not have needed a dome to protect them from mosquitoes and birds, other full-size animals would be able to get in. Also, full-size raindrops would be deadly to downsized people. More even if someone said they did not have insects because to close to the sea, we saw a dragonfly when they entered the village and also butterflies later (big ones !). And what about the waves? They live just by the water, any mild waves would shattered the pier. And what about snow that would cover them in minutes.
- Quotes
Ngoc Lan Tran: Other night on boat, what kind of fuck you give me?
Paul Safranek: What?
Ngoc Lan Tran: What kind of fuck you give me?
Paul Safranek: What kind? I don't...
Ngoc Lan Tran: American people, eight kind of fuck. Love fuck, hate fuck, sex-only fuck, break-up fuck, make-up fuck, drunk fuck, buddy fuck, pity fuck.
- Crazy creditsThe first half of the end credits feature the camera zooming out from the chest outward of Leonardo da Vinci's famous drawing Vitruvian Man.
- Alternate versionsThere is a special version (probably edited for nudity and language) that can be found on television.
- SoundtracksSuite No. 2 in B Minor for Flute - Badinerie
Written by Johann Sebastian Bach
Courtesy of Extreme Music
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Pequeña gran vida
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $68,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $24,449,754
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $4,954,287
- Dec 24, 2017
- Gross worldwide
- $55,003,890
- Runtime2 hours 15 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1