Timothy Olyphant Movie:

The Safety of Objects Region 2



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Timothy Olyphant Movie:
The Safety of Objects Region 2



Movie
The Safety of Objects [Region 2]
Salesrank: 278500

Used Price: $39.14
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • P
  • A
  • L
  • Starring:

  • Glenn Close
  • Dermot Mulroney
  • Mary Kay Place
  • Patricia Clarkson
  • Jessica Campbell
  • Editorial Review:
    A gorgeous collage of human details, The Safety of Objects intertwines the stories of four families living as neighbors in a pleasant suburb, all of them grappling in various ways with the aftermath of a car accident that left a teenager in a coma. That may sound histrionic, but the movie is carefully composed of little things, some ordinary--a lawyer uproots his wife's flowers because he mistakes them for weeds--and some absurd--a boy fantasizes about having a relationship with his sister's doll. But all of it, absurd or not, has some core of emotion. As the title suggests, the characters seek solace in the inanimate, things that can't betray, abandon, or truly need them. The outstanding ensemble cast includes Glenn Close, Dermot Mulroney, Patricia Clarkson, Mary Kay Place, Jessica Campbell (Election), and Kristen Stewart (Panic Room), among others; all fit together into a deeply felt whole. --Bret Fetzer

    The Safety of Objects [Region 2] Reviews:
    Kristen Stewart's first role 3 Star Review
    2009-12-19 - This is Kristen's first role. She plays a tomboy (she looks similar to her Panic Room role), dresses like one, acts like one, looks like one. Kristen's career started with a high note, in this movie she looks so natural, could it be because she plays a kid and was actually a kid? As they say never act in a movie with kids or pets, they steal the show! Loved Kristen in this film.

    The movie in itself is another story. The plot is all over the place, the scenes are jumpy and the book is much better than the screenplay. The acting is very good actually, Glenn Close and Patricia Clarkson are powerhouses no matter the roles they portray. Josh Jackson is in a coma during the film, it could have easily been Pacey in the bed there!, ha.

    this car needs a tune-up 2 Star Review
    2009-03-11 - ***SPOILER ALERT***

    Movies that have sets of characters and intertwining stories require tremendous skill to be successful (see Magnolia (New Line Platinum Series) for a tremendous example). Unfortunately, though it tries hard, The Safety Of Objects does not quite measure up. Yes, it has an ensemble cast of skilled actors & actresses, but this strongest aspect of the film fails to really bring the movie home to the viewer. Some of the characters are almost stereotypical, diminishing the sense of mystery surrounding their pain; others just aren't developed enough to fully engage our empathy. Some aspects of the movie are a stretch, i.e., the son's involvement with his sister's doll, though this can be seen allegorically. But the ending, with no real surprises here, and no breakthrough insight into the characters' dilemmas or into life in general, ends caustically with one of the mothers murdering her son in her "breakthrough" moment, offensive and untenable. I paid close attention to this movie and tried hard to like it, but overall it came across like a vehicle in poor running condition, never really reaching its destination.

    Bad idea 1 Star Review
    2005-11-06 - This film has a great cast but what a waste of talent! The individual short stories are artlessly scrambled together with disastrously fragmented results.

    Trying to film A.M. Homes's fiction must be like trying to film a bunch of Peanuts comic strips by separating & shuffling the individual panels. The rhythm & pace of the originals are gone & in their place we get a bunch of scenes out of a very mediocre soap opera.

    Each episode, each character needs total focus, the reader/audience's complete attention. Everything is happening INSIDE the characters. This movie demolishes any possibilty of that ever happening. On the page the boy who falls in love with Barbie (A Real Doll) is priceless. On the screen he's pretentious & unbelievable, a kid doing schtick.


    Ambitious puzzle of the human nature! 5 Star Review
    2005-08-13 - This a film that must be watched at multiple layers. You can figure out a multidimensional prism, where every face deals with a particular character and diverse approach about the existence's hard reality The impressive edition work and the increasing rhythmic tension can be imagined as frame that progressively shrinks and eventually struggles to every member of those four families whose lives are interweaved.
    The dramatic reality evasion experienced by the isolated young boy with his Barbie doll goes beyond a simple metaphor; the miscommunication between father and sons are explicitly shown: the TV as Marshall Mc Luhan stated once, works out as the XX Century babysitter; in the other hand we have a mother breathes loneliness in its purest state. She is in good shape and is powerfully attracted by men much younger than her.
    Close plays perhaps, the sharpest and painful role, dealing with her son in vegetative state, and her daughter who has true nightmares with a terrible secret you that will be revealed at the end.
    The complex narrative structure is not any obstacle for the viewer, due the life is precisely on this way; an unpredictable, voluntary and randomness events chain.
    In the other hand we have a surreptitious statement about the futility of material goods as one of the story's multiple dramatic basis; the amazing fact to maintain your hands on a car during three consecutive days just to guarantee a huge audience is a hard critic to some reality shows, and so the traveling around the market journey to carve in relief some unusual behavior patterns consumer.
    The cast was simply extraordinary.
    A winner, though may be a not easy going watch film for some viewers.


    Derailed not Destroyed 3 Star Review
    2005-05-19 - Individuals in four handsome suburban families are coming undone; the causes are diverse -- the trauma of a tragic accident, a divorce, a missed promotion, a growing apart in a long-standing marriage. Yet, gradually, instead of spinning out of control a la the much overpraised American Beauty, the individuals here do what most of us do when hit hard by life, they crawl back on course and, bruised but alive, move on. For that reason, Safety of Objects rings much truer than AB. I wonder if that could be because Safety is a movie made by, and largely about, women rather than driven by narcissism. Be that as it may, The Safety of Objects has its bizarre -- a radio station SUV promotional stunt -- and creepy -- particularly the quasi-kidnapping that dominates much of its last quarter -- moments. But in the end people make the right decisions and director Troche brings together a nicely crafted final scene where new neighbors are welcomed with gifts of the Objects and those we have watched for two hours again begin to risk intimacy with their closest family members. All in all, not a great movie, but very watchable, with Patricia Clarkson stealing the show as she almost always does.










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