Stick with the slow spin of the narrative; the intricate web will eventually snare you like an unsuspecting moth.
Spider (2003)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:125
Fresh:106
Rotten:19
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: Ralph Fiennes is brilliant in this accomplished and haunting David Cronenberg film.
Runtime: 1 hr 39 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Feb 28, 2003 Limited
Box Office: $1,278,369
Synopsis:
The details of life are acute to Spider (Ralph Fiennes), who is in a constant struggle to overcome a traumatic event early in his life that forever shapes the real world he is forced to reside in....
The details of life are acute to Spider (Ralph Fiennes), who is in a constant struggle to overcome a traumatic event early in his life that forever shapes the real world he is forced to reside in. He has been allowed to give life a second chance after a long stay in a mental institution and returns to the streets of the East End of London where he grew up; sent to a halfway house under the stern, but unsupervised watch of Mrs. Wilkenson (Lynn Redgrave).
The sights, sounds and smells of being reacquainted with his old neighborhood send Spider further down a shadowy path that reawakens memories of his where his mother (Miranda Richardson) and his father (Gabriel Byrne) raised him.
His freedom from the sterile and medicated environment afforded by the institution gives rise to an unfolding mystery that surrounds his youth. As he revisits the familiar streets, Spider soon begins to uncover the real truth, shifting seamlessly back and forth between the tragic events that polarized a boy’s adolescence to the shell of a man enduring the surreal plausible reality of today.
Further complicating matters, the halfway house only seems to both confuse and focus his perceptions at the same time. Terrance (John Neville), who also lives in the house, is a kindred spirit and supplies a certain comfort that has been absent from Spider’s life. While Mrs. Wilkenson starts to personify his delusional account of his past, leading Spider to question his own memories.
Based on the compelling novel by Patrick McGrath, who also adapts the screenplay, the gothic and fantastical world that director David Cronenberg conjures up with SPIDER immerses the audience into the depths of a deeply disturbed boy who has crafted a reality all his own; a reality that takes him to the very limits of his faltering sanity. -- © Sony Pictures Classics
Starring: Ralph Fiennes, Miranda Richardson, Gabriel Byrne, Bradley Hall
Starring: Ralph Fiennes, Miranda Richardson, Gabriel Byrne, Bradley Hall, John Neville, Lynn Redgrave
Director: David Cronenberg
Director: David Cronenberg
Screenwriter: Patrick McGrath
Producer: David Cronenberg
Composer: Howard Shore
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for Spider
Una forma esquizofrénica de comprender el mundo, de describir el amor, y de narrar las ideas básicas que nos definen como seres humanos...
Cronenberg charts with starkly minute detail the fragility of sanity and, even more disconcertingly, the fragile nature of reality.
Cronenberg reveals an intellect constantly at work. You feel that you are in the hands of a master at the peak of his craft.
Although languid to a fault, Spider offers some payoff for those with enough patience to stick it out.
Ralph Fiennes snorts, yelps, mumbles and babbles his way through Spider so expertly (and excessively) that you only want to get away from him. Now.
If you have patience, and enjoy outstanding and memorable performances, then you will be very much satisfied with this dark and troubling film.
Cronenberg's maturity as a filmmaker, as an uncompromising artist who plumbs the darkest depths of the human psyche, has never been more in evidence.
A difficult film, but an inspired one, the movie equivalent of eating a meal of artfully prepared eel or sea urchin.
It's a pleasure to watch such an understated treatment of potentially sensational subject matter.
Even more impressively, the movie works and reworks the Oedipal business, less as a given than a myth with extremely troubling origins and consequences.
Fiennes offers a brilliant performance that’s as enigmatic as the script.
Arguably the subtlest, most carefully textured film of Cronenberg's career.
Latest News for Spider
September 29, 2005:
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