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Elephant (2003)
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Reviews Counted:139
Fresh:98
Rotten:41
Average Rating:7/10
Consensus: The movie's spare and unconventional style will divide viewers.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for disturbing violent content, language, brief sexuality and drug use - all involving teens
Runtime: 81 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Oct 24, 2003 Limited
Box Office: $1,189,207
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
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Reviews for Elephant
Watching 'Elephant,' you begin to understand how Scrooge must have felt during the evening he spent with the ghosts in 'A Christmas Carol.'
Beautifully made, but ultimately a pretty facile treatment of a deadly serious tragedy
I'll be honest: I'm not sure there isn't something unsavory about a picture made for no other purpose than to build suspense and anticipation toward something so monstrous.
Van Sant deserves credit for tackling what mainstream cinema sees as a taboo subject - right now - but why does it have to be so slapdash?
An intelligent reflection on Columbine, preferring difficult questions to easy answers, with the sort of quiet subtlety that one would never expect from an elephant.
A living, breathing work that's distinctively different from the regular hyper-reality of Hollywood films.
Elephant is neither exploitive nor informative, although it's certainly a crock.
An almost metaphysical sigh heaved in response to the Columbine slayings.
Pseudo-important posturing without either original thought or the excitement of an unashamed exploitation movie.
achieves profundity—not through didactic Oliver Stone style exposé—but by presenting an ordinary day in the life of various students as prelude to unthinkable tragedy
One could fault the poetic distance of Elephant’s approach as inhumane, cruel, but it’s this reserve that cuts through the disaffectedness of high school experience.
A haunting, maddening, scary and very sad portrait of America as it enters a new millenium.
Van Sant, whose films often connect, sensitively, with the thinking of young people, has made a film that says things are wrong with kids today. We're missing the obvious.
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...
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