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Nine Lives (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:83
Fresh:62
Rotten:21
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: Nine Lives is bolstered by a strong cast and features many insightful glimpses into the lives of women.
Runtime: 1 hr 55 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Director Rodrigo Garcia has become a master of short film anthologies, with this, his third venture into the genre. His previous work in this field--THINGS YOU CAN TELL JUST BY LOOKING AT HER... Director Rodrigo Garcia has become a master of short film anthologies, with this, his third venture into the genre. His previous work in this field--THINGS YOU CAN TELL JUST BY LOOKING AT HER (which stitched together five separate stories) and TEN TINY LOVE STORIES (comprised of ten tales)--was shot in 2001, and featured predominantly female casts. The vignettes that make up NINE LIVES follow in the same vein, with Garcia taking brief dips into the lives of various women who are all floundering in relationships with important people in their lives. An all-star cast helps Garcia achieve his vision, and a highly skilled team behind the camera ensures that the action is perfectly executed, as each story is shot in just one single take. Garcia doesn't construct conventional narratives for his stories, he just drops viewers into situations, then pulls them out before any conclusions are reached. Some of the women we are exposed to are Robin Wright Penn, who plays a pregnant woman running into a former lover in a supermarket, resulting in a bout of anguish and self doubt; Ruth (Sissy Spacek), a woman caught up in an affair at a seedy motel; and Holly Hunter, playing a woman alarmed at her boyfriend's antisocial behavior. The stories are thrilling in their inconclusiveness, with Garcia leaving plenty of question marks about where these women are heading with their lives. Indeed, the first story in the film ends just as it seems to be starting, with prison inmate Sandra (Elpida Carrillo) letting out a howling, primal scream as she is pulled away from her daughter by prison guards, leaving the audience hanging in midair as the next story immediately begins. A breathtaking work that plays beautifully with the cinematic medium, NINE LIVES is an exhausting and demanding piece of work. [More]
Starring: Dakota Fanning, Elpidia Carrillo, Andrew Borba, Kathy Baker
Starring: Dakota Fanning, Elpidia Carrillo, Andrew Borba, Kathy Baker, Amy Brenneman, K. Callan, Robin Wright Penn, Lisa Gay Hamilton, Holly Hunter, Amanda Seyfried, Sissy Spacek, Glenn Close, Aidan Quinn, Joe Mantegna, Mary Kay Place
Director: Rodrigo García
Director: Rodrigo García
Screenwriter: Rodrigo García
Composer: Edward Shearmur
Studio: Magnolia Pictures
Reviews for Nine Lives
Yes, there's too much to mention. Good thing it's a pleasure to keep up with these women, even when their superior acting is needed to overcome the inferior material.
The snaky cinematography pulls you through even when the writing doesn't, and the best performances keep you hoping that you'll feel the next one or the one after that just as powerfully.
The cumulative effect of the rigorously controlled and purposive camera style adds up in the end to a collective portrait of womankind that is greater than the sum of its parts.
A beautiful freak: full of wonderful moments, but constrained by the rigid novelty of its structure.
Taken alone, most of the segments are insightful and reasonably involving, but the whole may be less than the sum of its parts.
The moments that Garcia has chosen to observe are unforgettable, the women -- played by an ensemble of actresses at the top of their respective games -- indelible.
The writing here is especially eloquent -- Garcia is the son of novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez -- suffused with maxims that somehow transcend the maudlin.
... the first third of the film is marred by a tendency to be morbidly serious and overly dramatic.
The cast steps up, embracing the chance to exercise acting chops normally limited to live theater. Most do so resoundingly, but two stand out: Robin Wright Penn and Jason Isaacs.
Nine Lives does contains a few tedious acting-school-exercise moments. Yet the accumulated power of the vignettes packs a wallop.
Nine Lives had me tense, engaged, sometimes disgusted, sometimes moved, and always interested. Garcia is an ingenious and eloquent storyteller.
[Garcia] leaves you thinking deeply about these people. And leaves you wanting more.
The stories resonant with a certain realness, a few stand out as exceptionally powerful. The downside is just as you're really getting involved in one, they move to the next.
a film hurtling slowly towards nothing, with little to keep one interested along the way
They make a persuasive case that, as one character says, 'Each woman is a universe.'
It's unclear why Garcia continues to choose to limit himself to these diluted portraits, rather than the layered and textured worlds that his writing and directing hint at.
The degree of our interest may vary, but Garcia maintains a very assured control with his fine, entrenched cast.
The stories are sketches, often without resolution, and while individual segments succeed admirably, taken together the portraits are a fitful match.
Latest News for Nine Lives
January 04, 2006:
Ebert & Roeper Share Their Favorites from '05
TV's biggest and most (relatively) beloved movie critics, Roger Ebert and Richard Roeper, have announced their top ten lists for 2005, and you can either listen to the banter on... More...
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