An unblinking look at our mania for murder, the film is a stunning response to an American tragedy that in its senselessness and human cost embodies the larger tragedy of this country's blood lust.
Elephant (2003)
Tomatometer
How does the Tomatometer work ![]()
Reviews Counted:139
Fresh:98
Rotten:41
Average Rating:7/10
Consensus: The movie's spare and unconventional style will divide viewers.
Runtime: 81 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Winner of the Palme d’Or and Best Director prizes at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival, Gus Van Sant’s Elephant takes us inside an American high school on what appears to be an ordinary day.... Winner of the Palme d’Or and Best Director prizes at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival, Gus Van Sant’s Elephant takes us inside an American high school on what appears to be an ordinary day. Throughout his career, from Mala Noche and My Own Private Idaho through Good Will Hunting and Finding Forrester, Van Sant has explored what it is to be young and searching for a place in the world, an identity that feels true. With Elephant, Van Sant takes these inquiries into new terrain, working with actual high school students to create a portrait of teenagers in today’s volatile world. Elephant unfolds on an ordinary day, filled with class work, football, gossip and socializing. The film observes the comings and goings of its characters from a gentle remove, allowing us to see them as they are. For each of the students we meet, high school is a different experience: stimulating, friendly, traumatic, lonely, hard. Beautiful and poetic – yet deeply disturbing - Elephant shows high school life as a complex landscape where the vitality and incandescent beauty of young lives can shift from light to darkness with surreal speed. It’s a beautiful fall day, and golden leaves skitter ahead of the wind across green lawns. Walking through the park on his way to class, Eli persuades a punk-rock couple to pose for some photographs. Nate finishes football practice and goes to meet his girlfriend Carrie for lunch. John leaves his dad’s car keys in the school office for his brother to pick up. In the cafeteria, Brittany, Jordan and Nicole gossip and complain about their mothers’ snooping. Michelle dashes to the library, while Eli snaps some photos of John in the hallway. John walks out onto the lawn, crossing paths with Alex and Eric. An ordinary high school day. Except that it’s not. HBO Films in association with Fine Line Features present a Meno Film Company Production, in association with Blue Relief, Inc. ELEPHANT. Director of Photography Harris Savides, ASC. Executive Producers Diane Keaton and Bill Robinson. Produced by Dany Wolf. Written, directed and edited by Gus Van Sant. [More]
Starring: John Robinson, Elias McConnell, Alex Frost, Eric Deulen
Starring: John Robinson, Elias McConnell, Alex Frost, Eric Deulen, Jordan Taylor, Carrie Finklea, Nicole George, Brittany Mountain, A.D. Miles, Alicia Miles, Kristen Hicks, Bennie Dixon, Nathan Tyson, Timothy Bottoms
Director: Gus Van Sant
Director: Gus Van Sant
Screenwriter: Gus Van Sant
Producer: Dany Wolf
Studio: Fine Line Features
Reviews for Elephant
Ultimately pointless, this lethargic picture seems to be trying to make a statement but succumbs to its own artiness -- including a cast made up mostly of non-actors.
Elephant is a document of our etherized condition: not terminal yet, maybe, but close.
Gus Van Sant's Columbine-inspired tone poem shatters your nerves while stranding your heart somewhere in deep space.
Elephant is a technically elegant experiment which builds tension then oddly deflates.
From the first images of drilling footballers and swirling clouds in an autumnal sky, Van Sant conjures the feeling of suburban school-year everydayness with Proustian power.
Uneven though he may be, Van Sant rivals Steven Soderbergh as the mad scientist of commercial filmmakers -- and the wildly polarizing Elephant is his most successful experiment to date.
Interesting as filmmaking per se but fails to hold up in its professedly objective treatment of a homegrown facet of violence.
Strips the tragic sentimentality from this particular social catastrophe
Covers the events leading up to a shooting spree at a high school and in the small details we see pain, loneliness, anger, irresponsibility, cruelty, self-disgust, and violence everywhere.
By making the camera an observer, we get a perspective that often comes out of horror movies, a choice that whips the ordinary with the terrifying, an unforgettable mix.
Elephant is so contrived and minimalistic that it has the dramatic effect of a line drawing.
Elephant carries the tag line 'an ordinary high school day. Except that it's not.' And that's kind of a problem — the movie is too mundane for its subject matter.
Elephant is nearly aptly named - it's slow and plodding... but it's not nearly as heavy as you'd hope.
Latest News for Elephant
August 26, 2007:
RT-UK's What to Watch at the Edinburgh Film Festival
Rotten Tomatoes UK heads up north to take in the sights and sounds of the Edinburgh Film Festival. And as the celebration of cinema draws to a close we present what's hot and... More...
More DVDs
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 14% 14% | The Ugly Truth |
| 98% 98% | Up |
| 36% 36% | G.I. Joe: The Rise of … |
| 52% 52% | The Taking of Pelham 1… |
| 45% 45% | Ice Age: Dawn of the D… |
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 32% 32% | Terminator Salvation |
| 44% 44% | Night at the Museum: B… |
| 86% 86% | A Christmas Tale |
| 60% 60% | Paper Heart |
What’s Hot On RT
Other News
Sponsored Links
Fresh Links
Featured

Subscribe to RT's YouTube channel and don't miss a second of our cracking video content.

Follow Rotten Tomatoes and join us as we tweet about the week's releases.



Top Critic

