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Movies / On DVD / The Singing Detective
The Singing Detective

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The Singing Detective (2003)

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Reviews Counted:105

Fresh:40

Rotten:65

Average Rating:5/10

Consensus: Delightful performance from Robert Downey Jr. can't save The Singing Detective's transition from TV to the big screen.

Runtime: 1 hr 48 mins

Genre: Dramas

Synopsis: In Keith Gordon’s The Singing Detective, re-imagined by Dennis Potter from his classic British miniseries, Dan Dark is a character who gives new meaning to the term “scars of childhood.” A hack... In Keith Gordon’s The Singing Detective, re-imagined by Dennis Potter from his classic British miniseries, Dan Dark is a character who gives new meaning to the term “scars of childhood.” A hack writer of detective stories, he has suffered from psoriatic arthropathy, a crippling disease of the skin and bones, from the time he was eight-years-old. His latest and worst outbreak has landed him in the hospital where he deliriously tries to figure out who he is and how he got to this terrible place in his life. As his fevered mind mingles real people with his fictional characters, and his past with his present, the film moves in and out of three worlds. There is the present day hospital where Dark is prodded by indifferent doctors and bossy nurses. As one of the bright spots in his bleak life, the kindly Nurse Mills (Katie Holmes) greases his sore body leading to an unexpected comic climax. As his condition grows more desperate, he is dispatched to the charge of the eccentric psychiatrist Dr. Gibbons (Mel Gibson). Initially reluctant to confront his tortured past, Dark is gradually lured out from the “cave in the rocks” under which his spirit has crawled. Dark is visited in the hospital by his ex-wife (Robin Wright Penn), whom he fears his sleeping with a character from his past and conspiring to steal the screenplay he wrote years ago of his first novel, The Singing Detective. But nothing is exactly what it appears here. In his hallucinatory state, Dark re-imagines the plot of his novel, casting himself in the starring role of a gumshoe who doubles as a singer in a dance band. The fictional story, a sordid film noir, has something to do with a smarmy character, Mark Binney (Jeremy Northam), who employs hookers to extort atomic secrets from scientists, and then disposes of the girls with the help of two hapless thugs (Adrian Brody and Jon Polito). As a coverup, Binney hires Dark to solve the murder case. Sex and violence are the clues and they lead Dark straight to his childhood. Dark can’t keep his mind from remembering his tortured youth growing up in his parents’ gas station in the California desert. When young Danny watches his mother (Carla Gugino) seduced by his father’s partner (Northam again), the seeds are planted for a lifelong disgust with sex and hatred of women. Mother and child are forced to flee to Los Angeles where things get even worse. It’s here that the poison in Dark’s mind starts to erupt on his skin. The stories Dark tells himself in the hospital are rooted in the 50’s rock-n- roll he heard as a kid, so in his feverish imagination characters can break into song and dance at any moment, lip-synching to the original music. The walls of Dark’s hospital room open and the doctors and nurses do the hand jive to “At the Hop.” Dark imagines a romance with Nurse Mills to the strains of “Mr. Sandman.” And the thugs try to knock off the Signing Detective in a club as he croons “Poison Ivy” from the bandstand. The Singing Detective smashes together black comedy, pulp fiction, naturalistic drama, expressionist film noir and lip-synched 1950’s rock-n-roll musical numbers in a totally original and multi-leveled exploration of a wounded soul as he heals and reassembles the jumbled pieces of his life. [More]

Starring: Robert Downey, Robin Wright Penn, Mel Gibson, Jeremy Northam

Starring: Robert Downey, Robin Wright Penn, Mel Gibson, Jeremy Northam, Katie Holmes, Carla Gugino, Adrien Brody, Jon Polito, Alfre Woodard, Saul Rubinek

Director: Keith Gordon

Director: Keith Gordon
Screenwriter: Dennis Potter
Producer: Mel Gibson, Steven M. Haft, Bruce Davey
Studio: Paramount Classics

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Reviews for The Singing Detective

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81 - 100 (sorted by date; UK critics are listed first)
Text View | |< << 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> >|
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It's unfair, if inevitable, to compare this off-off-Hollywood indie with the BBC opus, but even on its own terms, The Singing Detective hits sour notes.

Full Review Source: Film Journal International | comment Comment
10/28/03
Rex Roberts
Rex Roberts
Film Journal International

Though it doesn't work completely, it still has more creative energy than any half-dozen Hollywood blockbusters you can think of from the past summer.

Full Review Source: Journal News (Westchester, NY) | comment Comment
10/26/03
Marshall Fine
Marshall Fine
Journal News (Westchester, NY)

Coarse and misguided, Keith Gordon's film of the late Dennis Potter's own reworking of his intricate, dyspeptic, 1986 miniseries is a failure on every level.

Full Review Source: TV Guide's Movie Guide | comment Comment
10/24/03
Maitland McDonagh
Maitland McDonagh
TV Guide's Movie Guide

Virtuoso work by Robert Downey Jr. and an unrecognizable Mel Gibson (who also produced) can't keep The Singing Detective from degenerating into sheer noise.

Full Review Source: Newark Star-Ledger | comment Comment
10/24/03
Bob Campbell
Bob Campbell
Newark Star-Ledger

The casting misfires.

Full Review Source: New York Daily News | comment Comment
10/24/03
Jami Bernard
Jami Bernard
New York Daily News

It's a stylistic jumble, wrongheaded in every way.

Full Review Source: Los Angeles Daily News | comment Comment
10/24/03
Glenn Whipp
Glenn Whipp
Los Angeles Daily News

It is worth catching The Singing Detective to see the brilliant Robert Downey Jr. in another extraordinary performance.

Full Review Source: New York Post | comment Comment
10/23/03
Jonathan Foreman
Jonathan Foreman
New York Post

A rather dull, boring and strange (in the worst way) musical.

Full Review Source: E! Online | comment Comment
10/23/03
E! Online
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

The movie lurches when it should glide, shouts when it should whisper and mumbles when it should sing.

Full Review Source: New York Times | comment Comment
10/23/03
A.O. Scott
A.O. Scott
New York Times
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

The film, if less compelling than the original, is, nonetheless, persuasive and reasonably true to its source.

Full Review Source: culturevulture.net | comment Comment
10/23/03
Arthur Lazere
Arthur Lazere
culturevulture.net

For all the amazing lengths Downey and Gibson go to, the two actors seem to exist in a vacuum, for this stiff film is virtually devoid of a sense of texture, flow or wit.

Full Review Source: Los Angeles Times | comment Comment
10/23/03
Kevin Thomas
Kevin Thomas
Los Angeles Times
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

A film deserving of a conversation and, in no higher praise, of unreasonable comparisons.

Full Review Source: Film Freak Central | comment Comment
10/23/03
Walter Chaw
Walter Chaw
Film Freak Central

Potter's script pares down to virtual nothing the very narrative threads that allowed us, in the full-length version, to identify with his prickly protagonist.

Full Review Source: L.A. Weekly | comment Comment
10/23/03
Ron Stringer
Ron Stringer
L.A. Weekly

The scope and sweep of the yarn have been drastically reduced, and while director Keith Gordon tries to sustain its delirious energy through a restless and dreamlike visual style, the results are disappointing.

Full Review Source: Christian Science Monitor | comment Comment
10/23/03
David Sterritt
David Sterritt
Christian Science Monitor

Robert Downey Jr. is great in a role no one less magnetically reckless would dare approach.

Full Review Source: Entertainment Weekly | comment Comment
10/22/03
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Entertainment Weekly

A fine example of entertainment -- an eclectic mix of drama, film noir, and comedy, with plenty of fantasy musical numbers thrown in for good measure.

Full Review Source: ReelViews | comment Comment
10/22/03
James Berardinelli
James Berardinelli
ReelViews

Why anybody would want remake the 1986 BBC mini-series ... is beyond me....A tragic misfire.

Full Review Source: About.com | comment Comment
10/22/03
Jurgen Fauth
Jurgen Fauth
About.com

What happens to his beard stubble under the sores? How could they shave it without killing him? And how do they bathe him if every inch of his body is raw?

Full Review Source: About.com | comment Comment
10/22/03
Fred Topel
Fred Topel
About.com

The problems come in the shadow world, where everything's a jumble, where Dark's compositional strategy ('all clues and no solutions') eventually becomes wearing, and Gordon's direction can't hold it all together.

Full Review Source: Village Voice | comment Comment
10/21/03
Leslie Camhi
Leslie Camhi
Village Voice

This is a film that needs to sprawl, but it has the feeling of a greatest hits compilation.

Full Review Source: Filmcritic.com | comment Comment
10/16/03
Chris Barsanti
Chris Barsanti
Filmcritic.com
 
 
81 - 100 (sorted by date; UK critics are listed first)
Text View | |< << 1 2 3 4 5 6 >> >|
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