RottenTomatoes.com
Log In | Register | What is RT?
RT's Blu-ray HQ
  • Home
  • Movies
  • DVD
  • Celebrities
  • News
  • Critics
  • Trailers & Pictures
  • CommunityBeta
  • Box Office
  • | In Theaters
  • | Opening
  • | Upcoming
  • | Best Of
  • | Certified Fresh
  • | Showtimes
RT Search Powered by Google
help icon Enhanced RT
searches on Google
Click here to turn on enhanced search results from RT on your Google searches.
 
Movies / On DVD / Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus
Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus

Rate this Movie Help Icon

  • Write a Review
  • Read Reviews
  • Add to List
  • Get this Movie
  • Buy Poster External Icon
  • Visit Official Site External Icon
Bookmark and Share

Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus (2006)

  • T-Meter Critics
  • Top Critics
  • RT Community
  • My Critics
  • My Friends
  • DVD
31 %
Tomatometer
Template ImageTemplate Image

How does the Tomatometer work Help Icon

Reviews Counted:108

Fresh:33

Rotten:75

Average Rating:4.9/10

Consensus: This portrait of a groundbreaking photographer lacks the daring of its subject.

Rated: R [See Full Rating] for graphic nudity, some sexuality and language.

Runtime: 2 hrs 2 mins

Genre: Dramas

Theatrical Release:Nov 10, 2006 Limited

Box Office: $148,913

Synopsis: Was Diane Arbus a brilliant innovator whose photographs captured the beauty in the most desperate of subjects? Or was she an exploiter of "freaks," shilling pictures of the deformed as a modern-day... Was Diane Arbus a brilliant innovator whose photographs captured the beauty in the most desperate of subjects? Or was she an exploiter of "freaks," shilling pictures of the deformed as a modern-day sideshow? Regardless of where one stands on her work, few can argue its impact on the art world. In FUR: AN IMAGINARY PORTRAIT OF DIANE ARBUS, director Steven Shainberg makes a bold first attempt at bringing the artist to the big screen. The film opens with Arbus (Nicole Kidman) living as a depressed housewife in a ritzy Park Avenue apartment. Assisting her husband Allen (Ty Burrell) in his photography studio, Arbus helps him shoot ads for women's magazines. One night, after spying her mysterious next door neighbor--a sharply dressed man with a hood over his face--Arbus decides to heed her husband's advice to step out and take some photos of her own. She climbs the stairs to her neighbor's apartment with the intention of taking his portrait, and there she meets Lionel (Robert Downey, Jr.). Lionel suffers from hypertrichosis, a disease that causes thick hair to grow over every inch of his body, including his face. He and Arbus strike up a flirtatious friendship, and he introduces her to the underworld of New York. They party with dwarves, dominatrixes, and circus performers--all future subjects of Arbus photographs. Arbus's marriage soon begins to fall apart, and her relationship with Lionel builds towards a traumatic, but transformative, end. In an unusual twist, screenwriter Erin Cressida Wilson has completely fabricated the character of Lionel, and his ensuing effect on Arbus. He is Wilson's fantastical idea of what might have spurred Arbus's metamorphosis from repressed housewife to daring documentarian of those living on the fringe. As the title states, this isn't a biopic--it's an "imaginary portrait," and while some might take exception to FUR's surreal spin on reality, others might find the unconventional film a fitting tribute to the always unconventional artist. [More]

Starring: Nicole Kidman, Robert Downey, Ty Burrell, Jane Alexander

Starring: Nicole Kidman, Robert Downey, Ty Burrell, Jane Alexander, Emily Bergl, Boris McGiver, Christina Rouner, Harris Yulin

Director: Steven Shainberg

Director: Steven Shainberg
Producer: William Pohlad, Laura Bickford, Bonnie Timmermann, Andrew Fierberg
Composer: Carter Burwell
Studio: New Line Cinema

[See More Credits]

  • Trailers
  • Pictures
  • Trailer
    >
1 of 1

See More Movie Trailers & Pictures

Get This Movie

Rent DVD
 
 

Click on the "ADD" button to put this movie into your Netflix queue.

 
 
Buy DVD
 
 
Release:

May 8, 2007

No Details Exist
 
 

Reviews for Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus

  • T-Meter Critics
  • Top Critics
  • RT Community
  • My Critics
  • My Friends
  • DVD
 
 
101 - 116 (sorted by date)
Text View | |< << 1 2 3 4 5 6
Arrange By:Fresh | Rotten | Comments | Name | Source | Date
 
 

It's been a while since we saw a truly boggling sophomore slump, one of those infamous second-act follies, like Steven Soderbergh's Kafka, made by adirector blinded with ego and overreach.

Full Review Source: Entertainment Weekly | comment Comment
11/08/06
Owen Gleiberman
Owen Gleiberman
Entertainment Weekly
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Fur may not be entirely convincing, but it’s made with a conviction that deserves respect.

Full Review Source: New York Observer | comment Comment
11/08/06
Andrew Sarris
Andrew Sarris
New York Observer
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

The paperback edition of Patricia Bosworth’s mesmerizing book is being published again this week. My advice is forget about the movie and grab this literary gem fast. You will really learn something. You will learn nothing from Fur.

Full Review Source: New York Observer | comment Comment
11/08/06
Rex Reed
Rex Reed
New York Observer
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

...a strange movie, but it is interesting and the acting is superb, with Oscar-quality performances by both Kidman and Downey.

Full Review Source: tonymedley.com | comment Comment
11/08/06
Tony Medley
Tony Medley
tonymedley.com

You won't learn much about Arbus, aside from the correct pronunciation of her first name; you will get to see Kidman try (and fail) to find her inner freak.

Full Review Source: Village Voice | comment Comment
11/07/06
J. Hoberman
J. Hoberman
Village Voice
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

A fantastic and imaginative story of the normal and freakish in the fictitious prequel to the singular photography of Diane Arbus.

Full Review Source: Monsters and Critics | comment Comment
11/06/06
Ron Wilkinson
Ron Wilkinson
Monsters and Critics

You’d expect a conventional biopic to be bland and overly telescoped. But Arbus’s life and work ought to inspire something more than the generic tale of a repressed fifties doll wife who runs off with the circus.

Full Review Source: New York Magazine | comment Comment
11/06/06
David Edelstein
David Edelstein
New York Magazine
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

The filmmakers behind Fur sentimentalize Arbus, bringing her back into the comfort zone of a woman who is more sensitive than other people to the trials of the unfortunate -- exactly the kind of soft fifties liberalism that she knocked to pieces.

Full Review Source: New Yorker | comment Comment
11/06/06
David Denby
David Denby
New Yorker
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Imaginative enough but slow moving and too focused on alimited center.

Full Review Source: Compuserve | comment Comment
11/02/06
Harvey S. Karten
Harvey S. Karten
Compuserve

Impressively crafted and acted but far too narrowly and benignly conceived to satisfy even on its own terms.

Full Review Source: Variety | comment Comment
11/02/06
Todd McCarthy
Todd McCarthy
Variety
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

The movie feels like it's still in the darkroom.

Full Review Source: Rolling Stone | comment Comment
11/02/06
Peter Travers
Peter Travers
Rolling Stone
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

In what seems like a sequel to Birth, we are treated to endless silent close-ups of Kidman's hard, porcelain face struggling to signal girlish repression and longing for release.

Full Review Source: Slant Magazine | comment Comment
10/18/06
Dan Callahan
Dan Callahan
Slant Magazine

An affected fantasia that unsuccessfully tries to conjure Diane Arbus out of a strident urban fairy tale.

Full Review Source: Hollywood Reporter | comment Comment
10/11/06
Kirk Honeycutt
Kirk Honeycutt
Hollywood Reporter
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

The film is visually spectacular, overlapping worlds of fantasy and reality until we're never quite sure what's real and what's not.

Full Review Source: Cinematical | comment Comment
09/27/06
Kim Voynar
Kim Voynar
Cinematical

Though admirably defying biopic cliches, this is yet another version of Beauty and the Beast, a misconceived fairytale by writer Wilson that fails to illuminate Arbus' genius, and made worse by Nicole Kidman who's miscast as the repressed housewife.

Full Review Source: EmanuelLevy.Com | comment Comment
09/14/06
Emanuel Levy
Emanuel Levy
EmanuelLevy.Com

Earns points for its approach, and also for audacity.

Full Review Source: Film Blather | comment Comment
09/09/06
Eugene Novikov
Eugene Novikov
Film Blather
 
 
101 - 116 (sorted by date)
Text View | |< << 1 2 3 4 5 6
See All

More DVDs

Close
Top Rentals
Tomatometer Percentage Movie
36% 36% Angels & Demons
25% 25% Four Christmases
68% 68% Funny People
95% 95% Star Trek
14% 14% The Ugly Truth

More Rentals…

New On DVD This Week
Tomatometer Percentage Movie
32% 32% Terminator Salvation
44% 44% Night at the Museum: B…
86% 86% A Christmas Tale
60% 60% Paper Heart

More New Releases…

RT On Current TV

DIRECTV 358 | Comcast 107 | DISH Network 196

What’s Hot On RT

Disney Countdown

Disney Countdown

Look back on Disney's best animated movies!

RT's Gift Guide

RT's Gift Guide

Give the best movies, gear, and more!

Jason Reitman

Jason Reitman

The Up in the Air director's Five Faves

Friday Harvest

Friday Harvest

This week's best pics, vids, and posters!

Other News

Close
  • Top Stories
  • Popular
  • Interviews
 
 

Comments

 
 
Top Stories
Headlines Comments
  
  • Spielberg Hops Away from Harvey Source: Variety
21
  • Tarantino Could Have Directed Green Lantern Source: MTV
24
  • Will Duvall be Gilliam's Don Quixote? Source: Collider.com
26
  • No Hobbit Until 2012? Source: The Wrap
22
  • Don't Hold Your Breath for Hancock 2 Source: HitFix
42
  • Peter Berg Talks Battleship Source: CHUD
2
  • Summit Ponders Twilight Finale Source: Variety
159
  • First Look at Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Source: USA Today
56
  • Jeremy Renner Talks Hawkeye Possibilities Source: Superhero Hype
14
  • Todd Phillips Talks The Hangover 2 Source: Entertainment Weekly
18
Popular
Headlines Comments
  
  • Total Recall: Natalie Portman's Best Movies
76
  • Five Favorite Films with Jason Reitman
53
  • Critics Consensus: Everybody's Fine Is Just OK
49
  • 10 Horrifically Profitable Films
46
  • Box Office Guru Wrapup: Vampires and Football Break Thanksgiving Records
43
  • Five Favorite Films with Jesse Ventura
40
  • Sundance 2010: RT's 10 Most Anticipated Movies
39
  • Weekly Ketchup: Tron Team to Remake The Black Hole
33
  • Awards Tour: National Board of Review Winners List!
26
  • RT on DVD & Blu-Ray: Terminator Salvation and a Smithsonian Battle
22
Interviews
Headlines Comments
  
  • Director Ruben Fleischer Talks Zombieland
2
  • "I Don't Hate Women": Lars von Trier on Antichrist
17
  • Eric Bana talks Love the Beast - RT Interview
12
  • Fight Club Sound Designer Reflects on Film's 10th Anniversary
22
  • James Schamus talks Taking Woodstock - RT Interview
8
  • John Hurt Talks Harry Potter, Quentin Crisp and Alien - The RT Interview
15
  • Terry Gilliam Talks Doctor Parnassus
22
  • Wes Anderson Talks Fantastic Mr. Fox - RT Interview
9
  • Wolverine Creator Len Wein Talks About the Film
28
  • Gavin Hood Talks Wolverine; Possible Sequel
28
 
 

Sponsored Links

Around The Network

  • Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus at IGN

Fresh Links

Featured
History of Disney Animation
History of Disney Animation External Link

MSN Movies offers a little background on the success of Disney Animation.

90 Years of Screen Vampires
90 Years of Screen Vampires External Link

TIME takes a look back at the history of vampires on film.

Virtuoso Vistas of Lovely Bones
Virtuoso Vistas of Lovely Bones External Link

Techland examines the visual splendor of Peter Jackson's upcoming film.

Recent Headlines as TV Movies
Recent Headlines as TV Movies External Link

AOL put together a list of 10 recent news items that would be perfect as TV Movies.

The Death of Original Thought
The Death of Original Thought External Link

Hollywood.com's C. Robert Cargill explores how remakes and reboots have warped our thinking.

Promos
Follow RT on Twitter
Follow RT on Twitter External Link

Get the latest Tomatometer updates on upcoming movies!

 
 
About| Site Map| Help| RT To Go| Contact Us| Critics Submission| Linking to RT| Licensing| Movie List| Games| Celebs List| Newsletter
IGN Logo

IGN.com | GameSpy | Comrade | Arena | FilePlanet | GameSpy Technology
TeamXbox | Planets | Vaults | VE3D | CheatsCodesGuides | GameStats | GamerMetrics
AskMen.com | Rotten Tomatoes | Direct2Drive | Green Pixels


By continuing past this page, and by the continued use of this site, you agree to be bound by and abide by the User Agreement.
Copyright 1998-2009, IGN Entertainment, Inc. About IGN | Support | Advertise | Privacy Policy | User Agreement | Subscribe to RT's XML feed! IGN RSS Feeds
IGN's enterprise databases running Oracle, SQL and MySQL are professionally monitored and managed by Pythian Remote DBA
Certain product data ©1995-present Muze, Inc. For personal use only. All rights reserved.