In the Bedroom
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Average customer review:Product Description
Nominated for 5 Academy Awards(R) including Best Picture (2001), this universally acclaimed film features Academy Award-winners Sissy Spacek (Best Actress 1980, COAL MINER'S DAUGHTER, 1980) and Marisa Tomei (Best Supporting Actress 1992, MY COUSIN VINNIE), and Academy Award-nominee Tom Wilkinson (Best Actor, IN THE BEDROOM, 2001). When young Frank Fowler (Nick Stahl) becomes romantically involved with an older single mother (Tomei), his parents (Spacek and Wilkinson) are concerned. But when the relationship takes a sudden and tragic turn, the Fowlers are forced to confront the harsh reality of their situation and the inescapable consequences of their actions. An uncommonly suspenseful and disturbing film powered by a remarkable cast, IN THE BEDROOM has been hailed by critics everywhere as one of the year's finest motion pictures.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #14733 in DVD
- Brand: Disney
- Released on: 2002-08-13
- Rating: R (Restricted)
- Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
- Formats: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: English, French
- Subtitled in: English, Spanish, French
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 130 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com essential video
When a film with such emotional resonance and visual poise as In the Bedroom makes it to the screen, it seems an unexpected gift meant to remind us of the medium's possibility for sensitivity and epiphany. First-time director Todd Field, who adapted the film from a story by Andre Dubus with screenwriter Rob Festinger, quietly observes the loss, rage, and inexorable desire for revenge that follows the murder of a 21-year-old son. The film opens with Frank (Nick Stahl), back from college for the summer, taking up with Natalie (Marisa Tomei), a slightly older, sexually alluring woman with two boys and an estranged husband prone to violence. It is the tender portrayal of love between Frank and his parents, even as Frank and Natalie's relationship reveals the prejudices of all involved, that makes the subsequent anguish of the film so acute. Matt and Ruth Fowler (Tom Wilkinson and Sissy Spacek), middle-class denizens of a Maine lobster town where everyone knows each other, toil through weeks of devastation and blame following Frank's murder before their outrage obliterates all else. Field's exact handling of jealousy, class division, and grief is abetted by career-highlight performances from Wilkinson and Spacek. In the Bedroom is, along with You Can Count On Me, one of the best American dramas to grace the new millennium so far. --Fionn Meade
From The New Yorker
In Camden, Maine, a twenty-one-year-old college student, Frank (Nick Stahl), is having a headlong summer affair with a local woman, Natalie (Marisa Tomei), who has two little boys. Natalie is separated from her husband (William Mapother), the loutish scion of a prominent local family. When the husband kills his rival, Frank's hypercivilized parents (Tom Wilkinson and Sissy Spacek) begin to consider vengeance as a way of saving themselves from destroying each other. This Sophoclean tale, fleshed out from an intriguing, elliptical short story by Andre Dubus, draws its strength from minute observation of settings, moods, and manners in Camden and from a gradual tightening of the winch. Much of it is very quiet (the first-time director, Todd Field, is an actor and a photographer) but when it explodes, the violence, both verbal and physical, actually means something. -David Denby
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker
Customer Reviews
A Superb, Emotionally Shattering Drama!
It is hard to have enough good words to say regarding the level of excellence obvious in every frame of this painstakingly beautifully made drama. As is often the case these days, this work is the result of the efforts of an independent agent, showing how difficult it is to anything worthwhile done from within the confines of the Hollywood success-oriented movie-making monster. With a small budget and world-class actors, this economy-class effort shows that going in under budget doesn't necessarily lead one into mediocrity. Quite the contrary is true here. This movie shines through its poignant portrayal of a family reeling into existential crisis based on the savage murder of a family member, and deals superbly with the incredible range of emotions such an extraordinary event wreaks in its aftermath.
The terrific cast includes Sissy Spacek, Tom Wilkinson, and Marisa Tomei, each of whom was deservedly nominated for an Oscar for the performances rendered here. This is a starkly realistic depiction of life in the raw, and doesn't soft-pedal any aspect of the wrenching personal experience such monumental loss tows in its wake. All the second-guessing, recriminations and pent-up regrets of a lifetime come pouring out as the characters try to piece together some workable way to go on in the face of the simultaneous feelings of heartache and anger they feel about what has happened, about what they let happen by acts of both commission and omission, about not stepping up to the meaning of events that led up to the tragedy.
Anyone who has dealt with serious loss in life will relate to the film. In fact, the chief criticism I have of the film is that it is entirely too real, too angst-provoking, too intense, so that it is difficult to sit to watch in its entirety for that very fact. One finds oneself squirming in recognition of just how well-etched and carefully characterized each of the principal figures in the drama seems to be, and how the events that transpire all seem to build inescapably toward this most horrible of conclusions. We watch as the events reel into overdrive, the initial spate of shock and denial buckling inexorably under the need to find some fault, to lay some blame, to put some tangible thread of purpose, reason, or rationality underneath what at base seems to be such a totally illogical and absolutely insane act; the passionate murder of one man by another over love gone wrong.
Briefly summarized, this is easily one of the most powerfully realistic and emotionally explosive movies of the last decade. It twists and plucks at your heart strings and then suddenly cuts them out with a blunt instrument, all without the benefit of anesthesia. It pulls no punches in presenting an unforgettable portrait of a family flailing desperately about in an effort to come to terms with the violent death of one of its members. It is not an easy movie to watch, but is an uncommon movie experience as it deals so honestly with the extremes of emotion associated with the anger, anguish, and loss so common to the human condition. I highly recommend it.
The Killings
It has been said that the most tragic of life events is the death of a child: Tragic in the most grotesque and Classically Greek manner because it goes against nature for a parent to out live a child.
Todd Field's "In the Bedroom" is based on the short story, "The Killings" by Andre Dubus and though this is Field's first film it is obvious that he is now a director to be reckoned with.
Field has also assembled a dream cast in Sissy Spacek (Ruth), Tom Wilkinson (Matt), Marissa Tomei (Natalie)and Nick Stahl (Frank).
Ruth and Matt and son Frank live a quiet smalltown life in Camden, Maine. Ruth is a music teacher, Matt is the town's doctor and Frank is planning to go away to college to study Design/Architecture and having a summer fling, as he describes it, with Natalie who has two children and an ex husband, Richard (William Mapother). Ruth is not particularly happy with the affair and neither is Richard...for he kills Frank in a jealous rage.
Frank's murder is the turning point of the film and the focus changes to: dealing with grief, communication or lack thereof between couples, the justice of the legal system and how, as a friend, do u console the survivors of such a horrific crime?
"In the Bedroom" also showcases the talents of the actors especially Wilkinson ("The Full Monty")as Matt,who has spent the bulk of his life married to a woman he may or may not love but whose son was the light of his life. With Frank gone, what is to become of his marriage and his life? Sissy Spacek plays Ruth very quietly: all surface repose yet seething with anger and disgust. She never hits a false note and her scene with Natalie in the high school auditorium is stunning.
"In the Bedroom" is a major triumph for all concerned. It is a serious, adult film resonating, even vibrating with achingly heartfelt emotion...which comes from real pathos by way of truthful, well-written characters and situations.
One of the Finest American Films in Years
Repeated viewings of IN THE BEDROOM, whether they are in the theater or on the now available DVD, only serve to reinforce the initial impression that this film is one of the finest complete creations to come out of Hollywood in a long time. Beginning with Andre Dubus' story 'Killings', to the screenplay, to the subtleties of director Todd Fields, to the cinematography (the extraordinary opening sequences in the fields of hay with the towering trees' noisy leaves setting the scene for the sensitive love rendezvous), to the exemplary performances by Marisa Tomei, Nick Stahl, Sissy Spacek and Tom Wilkinson plus a supporting cast of fine actors, to one of the most brilliant musical scores ever created for a movie - this little film has everything. The idea of introducing the title in an early conversation about catching lobsters, of using the Balkan a cappella songs to wind through the tale, of addressing a tough subject for most audiences and doing it all with such finesse and aplomb is staggering. For this viewer this was easily the best film of 2001. I hope Fields will regroup this amazing cast and production crew and give us another film of this quality.




