Mathilda
Somewhat Regular Poster
Posts: 296
|
Post by Mathilda on Jan 30, 2004 10:46:51 GMT -5
Has anyone seen it?
|
|
|
Post by Robert on Jan 30, 2004 13:46:09 GMT -5
actually, I've never heard of it....haha
|
|
|
Post by brutal bob on May 10, 2004 18:01:54 GMT -5
this topic looks pretty dead but i've seen it thought it was really good too. the endings cool
|
|
|
Post by Robert on May 12, 2004 1:19:19 GMT -5
What is it about?
|
|
|
Post by brutal bob on May 16, 2004 21:20:50 GMT -5
its hard to say its really weird this kid goes through this strange shit so heres the review Donnie Darko" is an extraordinary look at one teenager as he attempts to come to grips with the theory of time travel, the search for answers to the existence of God, and the secret knowledge the world will soon end, while battling an assortment of hallucinations and delusions. The film's a dark coming-of-age tale told by way of a provocative script, and superbly acted out by Jake Gyllenhaal and a highly recognizable cast of supporting players. It's strange and twisted, yet charming, thought provoking and highly original.
Donnie Darko is a confused, mentally unstable teenager. Skipping his medication, Donnie is paid visits by Frank; a figure in a hideous bunny suit who delivers fatalistic coded messages. In one such message, Frank informs Donnie that there are little more than 28 days left in the world. Donnie passes this info on to no one, as everyone he could possibly tell already knows he's got mental problems.
The film chronicles Donnie's life as he counts down to Frank's apocalyptic deadline. During what may be the last month of life on Earth, Donnie falls in love, escapes from being killed when an airplane engine part crashes through his house and lands on the bed he should have been sleeping in - had he not awoken to follow Frank, searches for answers on the probability of there being a way to travel through time, and pays visits to his psychiatrist. With the impending end of the world looming large in Donnie's mind, he becomes an outspoken critic of the town's self-help guru, Jim Cunningham. In a scene that plays out like a smarmy infomercial, Cunningham manipulates Donnie's high school peers and teachers alike into believing in his nonsensical rhetoric. Donnie - perhaps feeling there's not much worse that can happen to him than the world ending - fires question after pointed question at Cunningham during a school assembly. Later that night, with Frank's assistance, Donnie is able to bring down Cunningham, exposing him for the self-righteous fraud that he is.
What exactly is "Donnie Darko?" First-time writer/director Richard Kelly purposefully wanted "Donnie Darko" to be a genre-busting tale that would mean vastly different things to different people. Kelly offers this explanation of the film, "Maybe it's the story of Holden Caulfield, resurrected in 1988 by the spirit of Phillip K. Dick, who was always spinning yarns about schizophrenia and drug abuse breaking the barriers of space and time. Or it's a black comedy foreshadowing the impact of the 1988 Presidential election, which is really the best way to explain it. But first and foremost, I wanted the film to be a piece of social satire that needs to be experienced and digested several times."
|
|