Tim Robbins Movie:

The Secret Life of Words



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Tim Robbins Movie:
The Secret Life of Words



Movie
The Secret Life of Words
The Secret Life of Words
List Price: $29.98Label: Universal Studios

Salesrank: 28415

Released: May 8, 2007
Our Price: $8.90
Used Price: $2.29
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • AC-3
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • DVD
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Sarah Polley
  • Tim Robbins
  • Sverre Anker Ousdal
  • Javier Cámara
  • Danny Cunningham
  • Editorial Review:
    Academy Award winner Tim Robbins stars in this compelling film from Pedro Almodovar, the renowned director of Volver and Talk to Her. Powerfully acted and critically acclaimed, The Secret Life of Words is a moving story about discovering love and hope when least expected. A wounded oil worker forms an unlikely and emotional relationship with a nurse based on his need to divulge the secrets of his past and her mysterious silence about her own identity. Jack Mathews of the New York Daily News calls it "remarkably compelling…one you won't soon forget."

    Description of The Secret Life of Words:
    In the Secret Life of Words, a wounded man and a hearing impaired woman forge an unlikely relationship that transcends romance. They reach an understanding that speaks as much for the affection they hold for one another, as it does their need to simply be recognized. Academy Award winner Tim Robbins (Bull Durham, The Shawshank Redemption) stars opposite Sarah Polley (The Sweet Hereafter) in this emotional drama directed and written by Isabel Coixet (who also collaborated with Polley in My Life Without Me). Polley plays Hanna, an emotionally-stilted factory worker who is forced to take a vacation. Instead of jetting off to the Caribbean or the South of France for some sun, Hanna opts for Northern Ireland where she is hired to work as an oil rig nurse, despite the fact that she may never have actually had any medical training. Robbins portrays Josef, a chatty burn victim who is left temporarily blind, but still has enough life in him to flirt with Hanna. She would rather turn down her hearing aid and make as little contact with others as possible. Slowly, the two share secrets and help each other recover--him physically, her emotionally. While the burgeoning love story is a bit implausible, the film does a good job in exploring two characters with complicated backgrounds. --Jae-Ha Kim

    The Secret Life of Words Reviews:
    Too brief and yet too long 4 Star Review
    2009-11-14 - I'm a sucker for both pretension and French cinema, and this film flirts with both without being overly obnoxious about it. I'm sure there's some who might disagree, but I absolutely promise, promise, this is a far better movie if you simply turn it off about 15 minutes before the end. It's a plague, endings like this one. I think the problem lies in trying to make a film 'for' someone, or someones, even if it's only an audience of one's self.

    Otherwise, I can only complain technically about there being at least one too many music-ed over montages during the course of the film. It can be tricky to pull off, the montage. The problem this particular attempt runs into is that a divertissement should not be an intermission.





    too stupid for words 2 Star Review
    2008-10-20 - sorry...i love most of this director's movies, but when the helicopter airlifted the nurse to the drilling site, while at the same time ignoring airlifting the patient out, this movie lost all cfredibility for me,

    I'm sure the acting is excellent, the cinematagraphy et al is all first rate...but the premise took a nose dive with that one....

    I wish I could have liked this more 3 Star Review
    2008-07-30 - The Secret Life of Words is a well intended film, but like good intentions, it gets derailed by its own earnestness. The film opens with a child's voice: are these words from the main character Hanna, representing the remnant of a childhood past, a fleeting ghost of safety? Or is it the inner voice, the inner words, that only Hanna can hear, since a violent and brutal war in the Balkans left her deaf? Or is this child's voice a vain attempt to make the movie deeper than it really is? I vote for the later.

    The acting in the film is adequate; the location, an isolated oil rig, tenuously and temporarily alive in the middle of a threatening sea, is apt. What seems to be amiss is the dialogue in the script. We just dont get the secret life of the words in this film.

    I would give this movie an extra half star for wanting to please.




    Compelling Claustrophobic Drama 5 Star Review
    2008-05-25 - "Sarah Polley gives a wonderfully searching performance, as a woman in a state of extreme isolation, in "The Secret Life of Words," a compellingly claustrophobic drama set mostly aboard an oil rig. This film tackles its big theme -- silence as a defense against tragedy -- with delicacy, sympathy and originality, sans sentimentality." Jonathan Holland

    This film grabbed me and cut to my core. Immediately this young woman played by Sarah Polley spoke to me. This is an actress who can display with a flick of her hair and a non expression that something has gone terribly wrong and will never be right again. Hanna as she is known, is deaf, she lives alone, she works in a factory and has not had a sick day or a day off in 4 years. We know she eats white rice, chicken nuggets and half an apple for every meal. She has a collection of almond scented soap in her bathroom, and she uses a new bar everytime she washes her hands. This is all we know. She is summoned to her supervisor's office and told she must take a 4 week vacation. Her non-speech and work ethic gives her fellow workers a case of nerves, she must at least act human.

    Hanna goes to the coast of Northern Ireland and while eating dinner one evening she overhears a conversation that changes her life. An oil rig has had a fire, and there is a great need for a nurse to care for a burned man. She volunteers for the duty and is flown by helicopter to the oil rig.

    Hanna meets her patient, Josef, played by Tim Robbins. He has corneal burns and cannot see, leg fractures and burns on his body and face, but he remains intelligent and self-deprecating. He obtained his burns by trying to save someone else. The fact is that what Hanna and Josef don't say is sometime's more significant than what they do say. Hanna maintains her stalwart composure and does not give anything away. Little by little their relationship develops and Hanna begins to open her heart and secrets, as does Josef. On one day, Hanna discloses her shattering past. Josef gathers her in his arms, and this scene is more exqisite than words can express.

    The rest of the small crew on the rig are loners as is Hanna. They all have their stories and the chef is the most telling. Hanna discovers that food should be tasted and enjoyed. A scene with Hanna, sitting on the stairs, devouring the rest of Josef's meal will live on. There is a sharing of respect, and Hanna has a family of sorts.

    The trauma of both of these characters is lessened by their meeting. Hanna helps Josef heal and Josef helps Hanna with her emotional recovery. Josef has bones that mend and Hanna has a life opened to the world. The time comes when Josef needs more expert care, and they are both helicoptered off the rig to the city. "Hanna, Hanna,' we hear Josef yell as he is lifted into the ambulance. "Hanna,Hanna".

    The soundtrack to the film is exquisite. From Clem Snide to David Byrne to Tom Waits and to Paolo Conte. Each song has its place and link the narrative as needed. It is a sound track to be played over and over again.


    "Instead of being a visionary film that shows us how people behave when they have been tremendously damaged, this becomes an explanatory film that tells us that its characters have been damaged, and need love to heal them. This may or may not be true, but it's definitely a truism, and it dissolves at least some of the picture's potency and mystery into cliché." Emily Taylor

    We often hear without words, and we understand through facial changes what someone is thinking. This film is the ultimate in communication without words, and when words are spoken, each of them evokes a distinct memory.

    Highly Recommended. prisrob 05-24-08

    The Sweet Hereafter (New Line Platinum Series)

    The Shawshank Redemption (Two-Disc Special Edition)


    Great movie 4 Star Review
    2008-03-25 - I loved this film. It's a very good combination of a personal drama with politics & history. Tim Robbins' performance is great. Sarah Polley is so good as she was in "My lIfe without me". I'm looking forward to seeing new films from Isabel Coixet.










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