An innovative ride that carries the viewer into a world familiar from genre films and the novels of Dashiell Hammett, yet quite unlike anything we've seen before.
Brick (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:129
Fresh:101
Rotten:28
Average Rating:7/10
Consensus: This entertaining homage to noirs past has been slickly and compellingly updated to a contemporary high school setting.
Runtime: 1 hr 50 mins
Genre: Action/Adventure
Theatrical Release:Mar 31, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $1,973,180
Synopsis: A detective story set around a contemporary California high school, BRICK dares to combine the teen and film noir genres. In mixing these two disparate worlds, Director Rian Johnson creates many... A detective story set around a contemporary California high school, BRICK dares to combine the teen and film noir genres. In mixing these two disparate worlds, Director Rian Johnson creates many comically jarring and ironic moments. When loner Brendan Frye (a barely recognizable Joseph Gordon-Levitt of THIRD ROCK FROM THE SUN) gets a desperate-sounding call from his ex-love Emily (Emilie de Ravin), he feels compelled to help her, plunging himself into the seedy world of teenage crime that pulled her away from him in the first place. Throughout this journey, Brendan plays a hard-boiled type reminiscent of Humphrey Bogart's iconic Sam Spade character. Johnson's script invests heavily in the fiction of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, and is filled with other archetypical characters like the femme fatale (Nora Zehetner), the eccentric crime lord (a brilliant Lukas Haas), and the dame in distress (de Ravin). As teens trade in their cell phones for things as old-fashioned as pay phones and 1940s gangster vocabulary, occasional references to detention and first period provide a humorous contrast with the otherwise unbelievable complex, precocious, and largely parentless world that these teens inhabit. With its heavy reliance on references to old noir classics like THE MALTESE FALCON and THE BIG SLEEP, the film may risk alienating viewers not familiar with these older films. Seeing teenagers speaking in coded detective-movie-style lingo is entertaining, but mixed with the often overlapping, fast-paced but muttered dialogue, it also proves to be distracting at points. People eager to see a predictable teen drama may be confused by BRICK, as its goal is to turn the genre on its head, earning inevitable comparisons to films like 2001's surreal teen fantasy DONNIE DARKO. Because of the film's attention to detail and witty yet hard-to-follow dialogue, BRICK may be better appreciated on second viewing. [More]
Starring: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Lukas Haas, Nora Zehetner, Noah Fleiss
Starring: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Lukas Haas, Nora Zehetner, Noah Fleiss, Noah Segan, Meagan Good, Emilie de Ravin, Jonathan Cauff, Lucas Babin
Director: Rian Johnson
Director: Rian Johnson
Producer: Mark Mathis, Ram Berman
Studio: Focus Features
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Reviews for Brick
It shouldn't work, but thanks to Johnson's inventive screenplay and a terrific lead performance by Joseph Gordon-Levitt, it mostly does.
Everyone is smart and everyone assumes that everyone else is smart. That includes Johnson and his high regard for his audience.
Brick is just an elaborate noir send-up, and an enjoyably kooky one at that
Brick represents an impossible dream, though: the reuse -- with conviction -- of cinema's most calloused and beloved genre as applied to contemporary middle-class life.
A respectable if not entirely worthy addition to the burgeoning neo-noir film genre.
What's most impressive here isn't the conceit of the premise but the economy of the direction, as when Johnson uses a few simple shots and an off-camera clanging-metal sound effect to cause us to feel the pain of a thug crashing head-first into a pole...
The mystery feels elementary and his characters, though compelling as sketches, remain one-dimensional from the first to the last good-looking frame.
Forget the media-saturated affectations that surrounded Brokeback Mountain and Crash. The real vicious truth is the state of the American teenager.
the school's cliques, cants and "class" politics are shown to be as amoral and impenetrable as any criminal netherworld dreamt up by Raymond Chandler.
The action is raw and immediate. The film is unsettling to look at, all bathed in a cool blue light and with an intensity about everything that will remind you, and not in a pleasant way, of how large the world looms when one really is in high school.
Brick is almost fiendish in its insistence on finding modern-day parallels to classic pulp-fiction figures.
The actors play it with poker-faces, but the further we go into the noir territory of hard-boiled, fast-paced dialogue and dames wrapped in crimson and black, the more ticklish Brick gets.
a startlingly original, wholly engrossing, and brilliantly plotted piece of work
Latest News for Brick
October 13, 2006:
The Weekly Ketchup: "Batman Begins" Villain Talk, "Transformers" Set News, "Evan Almighty" Budget Woes, And More!
In this week's Ketchup, we have more guessing games regarding who will be Batman's other foe in "The Dark Knight," music and pics from the "Transformers"... More...
April 20, 2006:
Interview With "Brick" Director Rian Johnson
A film noir set at a contemporary high school, "Brick" is a strange, tough little movie, a throwback to the days of Sam Spade that utilizes its young actors to... More...
March 06, 2006:
Check Out Exclusive Photos From "Brick"
Rian Johnson won last year's Sundance Jury Prize for Originality of Vision with "Brick," his teenage film noir starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt -- and we've got the first... More...
February 15, 2006:
WonderCon Wrap-Up: Peeks At "Brick," "Night Watch" and "Pathfinder"
Our WonderCon Wrap-Up continues, with a look at a few of the lesser-known flicks presented last weekend: "Brick," "Night Watch," and "Pathfinder." More...
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