Patricia Arquette Movie:

The Indian Runner




Click here for more detailed information about the
Patricia Arquette movie:

'The Indian Runner
'




   Patricia Arquette

   Pictures
   Posters
   Movies
   News
   Bio
   Candid Photos
   Latest Photos
   Screensavers
   Wallpapers
   Pics
   Video Clips

   Celebrity Movies


Patricia Arquette Movie:
The Indian Runner



Movie
The Indian Runner
The Indian Runner
List Price: $14.98Label: MGM (Video & DVD)

Salesrank: 24435

Released: December 11, 2001
Our Price: $5.29
Used Price: $5.30
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • Dubbed
  • DVD-Video
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • David Morse
  • Viggo Mortensen
  • Valeria Golino
  • Patricia Arquette
  • Charles Bronson
  • Editorial Review:
    Sean Penn announced his retirement from acting, then wrote and directed this emotionally raw, somewhat sprawling film, suggested by Bruce Springsteen's song "Highway Patrolman." David Morse is the title character, an upstanding citizen and peace officer who tries to help his troubled--and troublesome--brother (Viggo Mortensen), recently returned from Vietnam. The brother and his girlfriend (Patricia Arquette) have bad news written all over them--but Morse does what he can to be protector, to no avail. Penn, whose model was John Cassavetes, favors long scenes that draw intense emotions from his cast, which includes Charles Bronson (in an unusually low-key role), Sandy Dennis, and Valeria Golino. But it's as depressing as Springsteen's song. --Marshall Fine

    The Indian Runner Reviews:
    "Highway Patrolman" comes to the screen 4 Star Review
    2008-09-18 - Joe (Morse) has been trying to do his best since he lost the farm. He's a cop now.

    Frank (Mortenson) is a returning Vietnam vet, who was in trouble well before he went to war. The first thing that happens when he comes back is he robs Joe's wallet of $40, goes elsewhere and lands in jail for striking his girlfriend (Arquette).

    When Joe invites Frank back to live with them, it's a recipe for disaster. This is a bleak, very real drama. It's well-acted on everyone's part, but a bit slow. Definitely an interesting period piece and character study. "Indian Runner" proves Sean Penn can direct as well as act.

    Rebecca Kyle, September 2008



    This Movie SUCKED! 1 Star Review
    2008-06-29 - It was as if Sean Penn watched "Blue Velvet", tried to be David Lynch and failed miserably. I can't believe people rated this dog positively. Watch "Blue Velvet" and "Wild At Heart" and then watch this piece of crap and tell me Sean Penn shouldn't stick to.....whatever it is he does besides directing movies. I would have given this abortion a C- in a high school film class.

    Cop or veteran, guilt will not run away 5 Star Review
    2007-09-24 - It is a marvelous film for many reasons and it has many meaningful interpretations. The first we can think of is of course the effect of the Vietnam War on a normal man. It made him someone whose desire to kill, whose need to kill could never be controlled and dominated. Nothing could keep him within the limits of normalcy, that is to say a violence that is purely symbolical or superficial. His desire was not to punch a few noses and be done with it, but it was to kill, and I repeat that was a need for him to be satisfied in order to survive. The second line is that of the two brothers. One chose to be a cop and he killed legally. That's not in anyway easy, but at least you can come to terms with it: you saved your life from someone who wanted to kill you, and that was legal. You can wonder why he shot to kill, right in the heart, but he was entirely justified to shoot, so why not to kill? The other chose to go to Vietnam and there he killed but it was never to really save his life, never really justified because it was not self defense on his own turf but aggression in a foreign country, and the killing was not exactly shooting at combatants, but more often at women and children. This seems to prove that the desire to kill is in any man, good or bad, and that the only choice you have is to do it legally and morally or not. Vietnam produced twisted, distorted and completely warped personalities for whom killing had become a need, just like alcohol or smoking for others. This leads to a confrontation between the two brothers and the dilemma for the cop who has to arrest or shoot his own brother. He chose differently. The third line is metaphorical. The guilt the cop had built in himself after killing the young chap who was running away and then started to shoot at him can only come out, be retrieved and rehabilitated if in a way or another the need to kill is projected into someone else and that someone else is forced to go away. The guilt has to be entrusted to some Indian runner who will take it away as if it were a message he has to go dump in the ocean or the infinite. But this meaning is metaphorically symbolical of us all. We all have to get rid of this death instinct, and here comes the ending of the film. It is a dream society will let us go without making us pay for that death instinct. And the price is called guilt because we have to repress it and then it will go on lurking in our minds forever. There is no Indian runner for our death instinct, just a repressed guilt that may come out one day, but when and how no one knows.

    Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, University Paris Dauphine, University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne & University Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines


    sad story/great acting 4 Star Review
    2007-01-03 - Everyone in this film from Charles bronson to Dennis Hopper turned in a stellar performance . Be prepared for a very dark story however.Viggo Mortensen and David Morse play brothers who took different paths in life and we watch as one is unable to save the other from himself & his demons.Viet Nam is an integral part of Mortensen's disintegration and it ain't pretty.It is very moving however.David Morse, a fine actor, has never been better.There is a full frontal nude shot of Viggo but there's nothing sexy about it.Sean Penn has given us a film that's a lot like him.Intense,deep,brilliant and unsettling.Perhaps it's "a message".

    The train wreck you can't look away from 4 Star Review
    2006-12-21 - This fine movie probably didn't get as much attention as it merited because of its bleakness and because it represented Penn's earliest work as a director. It is much like watching the proverbial train wreck: devastating but irresistible. However, it is worth enduring the pain for at least one viewing, which will leave a lasting impression. It can be a bit slow in places but is well-written, superbly acted, and beautifully photographed.

    Mortensen is absolutely wonderful, both repulsive and heart-breaking as the hopelessly destructive younger of two brothers who have gone separate ways after growing up on a family farm in Wisconsin. After the farm fails and must be sold, the older brother, well-played in an understated performance by David Morse, goes into law enforcement, marries a woman he adores, and forges a contented family life with her and their baby son. When the younger brother comes back into their midst, fresh from the military and a stint in prison resulting from explosions of his inexplicably violent temperament, the older brother has to determine at what point he stops trying to save his angry sibling from himself. The entire cast is fine - a young Patricia Arquette as Mortensen's love is deeply touching. Charles Bronson and Sandy Dennis appear briefly as the brothers' parents. While the film's story centers on the struggle between the two brothers, the mysterious inexorability of character is its underlying theme. The narrative and character development stand on their own, however, to suggest the deeper theme. A sad but memorable film, and kudos to Penn and his cast for making this film - it was obviously a labor of love.


      Don't forget to check out other celebrity movies:  
    Justin Timberlake Movies
    Steve Carell Movies
    Winona Ryder Movies
    Jamie-Lynn Sigler Movies
    Monica Bellucci Movies
    Tori Spelling Movies
    Scarlett Johansson Movies
    Eva Mendes Movies
    Alexandra Wentworth Movies
    Amber Valletta Movies
    Adrienne Barbeau Movies
    Amy Yasbeck Movies
    Angela Lansbury Movies
    Hugh Jackman Movies
    Alison Eastwood Movies
    Leonardo DiCaprio Movies
    Gina Gershon Movies
    Ryan Gosling Movies
    Tommy Lee Jones Movies
    Dustin Hoffman Movies
    Daniel Radcliffe Movies
    Adrienne Shelly Movies
    Julianna Margulies Movies
    Calista Flockhart Movies
    Heather Locklear Movies
    Natasha Henstridge Movies
    Eva LaRue Movies
    Dakota Fanning Movies
    Anna Paquin Movies
    Lauren Bacall Movies
    Patricia Heaton Movies
    Kurt Russell Movies
    Hilary Swank Movies
    Mel Gibson Movies
    Aidan Quinn Movies
    Andrea Bowen Movies
    Kathryn Morris Movies
    Rosanna Arquette Movies
    Heather Graham Movies
    Jude Law Movies