Anyone with a taste for high-risk filmmaking won't want to miss it.
Bringing Out the Dead (1999)
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Reviews Counted:104
Fresh:74
Rotten:30
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: Stunning and compelling, Scorsese and Cage succeed at satisfying the audience.
Runtime: 2 hrs 1 min
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Martin Scorsese exhilaratingly adapts Joe Connelly's novel about Frank (Nicolas Cage), a paramedic working among the filth and mental desolation of New York City's Hell's Kitchen in the early... Martin Scorsese exhilaratingly adapts Joe Connelly's novel about Frank (Nicolas Cage), a paramedic working among the filth and mental desolation of New York City's Hell's Kitchen in the early 1990s. Lately he has been haunted by the visions of a beautiful 18 year-old girl whom he was unable to resuscitate. Soon after, another image begins to torment him, that of Mary (Patricia Arquette), a recovering drug addict who enters Frank's life when he attempts to save her father. His spiral into even further confusion is paralleled with his three driving partners: Larry (a boisterous John Goodman), whose advice to Frank is not to think about all the death and violence; Marcus (a scene-stealing Ving Rhames), a religious fanatic who uses his medical skills as propaganda for the Lord; and Walls (a maniacal Tom Sizemore), a loose cannon who has no sensible grounding whatsoever. In order to escape the madness that is consuming him, Frank asks, unsuccessfully, to be fired. He must ride out the nightmare, trying to redeem the lives of Rose, Mary, and himself in the process. Scorsese uses his camera to capture Frank's wavering mental state with tilted angles and fast-speed photography. In portraying the tormented Frank, Cage dives wholeheartedly into character, delivering another fiery performance. [More]
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Patricia Arquette, Ving Rhames, John Goodman
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Patricia Arquette, Ving Rhames, John Goodman, Tom Sizemore, Marc Anthony, Mary Beth Hurt, Cliff Curtis, Nestor Serrano, Aida Turturro, Cynthia Roman, Larry Fessenden, Afemo Omilami, Queen Latifah, Martin Scorsese
Director: Martin Scorsese
Director: Martin Scorsese
Screenwriter: Paul Schrader
Producer: Barbara De Fina, Scott Rudin
Composer: Elmer Bernstein
Reviews for Bringing Out the Dead
It's hard to think of another filmmaker who has given his hometown such a charged ambivalence, mixed such a cocktail of love and repulsion.
This isn't a movie about uncompromising psychological plights, but one about a man seeking hope, sense, and renewal. It is a tale that has much to say, and one that speaks with a clear and distinctive voice.
This film can't help being anything but disturbing, one that questions living in a modern city.
If you enjoy redemptions drenched in rhapsodic agony, religious mysticism and the bloody ick of emergency room chaos, that journey will be bliss for you.
Scorsese shows himself the wily maestro of shadow and light - emotionally and literally.
Scorsese's most impressive, dramatically sound piece of celluloid in at least the last seven years.
Yet another example of their gift for combining the edgy with the poetic.
Although Scorsese and Schrader may not have pulled off alchemy by transforming an undistinguished piece of literature into a great film, Bringing Out the Dead is still the best adaptation imaginable of its source material.
This is the real poop behind the medical emergency scenes. Scorsese and team don't hold back.
Its central story and character are so uninvolving that they're overshadowed by the visaul razzle-dazzle and fail to act as a cohesive for all Scorsese's cinematic tricks.
The ideas are here and so is the cast, but the set-ups in the script are merely serviceable.
A scalding-hot reminder of Scorsese's talent, and his adoration of Manhattan's otherworldly cosmicity.
The movie is a riveting, yet often times amusing portrait of what it’s like to reach the haunting edge of insanity.
Schrader has pared Joe Connelly's novel for the screen, keeping the details, but giving it a cohesiveness that it lacked in print.
Latest News for Bringing Out the Dead
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