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Irreversible

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39 JMG
Disc, Artwork
1159 676 [ Buy It ]

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Theatrical Release

November 30, 1999

DVD Release

January 1, 2002

Studio

Lions Gate

Rated

Unrated

Directors

Actors

Monica Bellucci, Vincent Cassel, Jean-Louis Costes, Stéphane Derdérian, Stéphane Drouot, Albert Dupontel, Michel Gondoin, Mourad Khima, Christophe Lemaire, Abbate Michael, Eric Moreau (II), Philippe Nahon, Jo Prestia, Titof

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Currently selling for $9.85 NEW at Amazon.com

Formats

  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC

Additional Information

Alex and Marcus are a couple whose story is told over the course of a fateful evening in a series of long takes. An emotional odyssey that unspools in reverse from gut-wrenching violence to sweetly observed moments of sublime tenderness.

System Requirements:

  • Starring Albert Dupontel, Monica Bellucci, Vincent Cassel
  • Directed by Noe
  • Running time: 97 minutes
  • Copyright Lion's Gate 2003

    Format: DVD MOVIE - Product Description

    Irreversible begins with the closing credits running backwards before the film begins (or ends) with Marcus (Vincent Cassell) and Pierre (Albert Dupontel) being escorted out of a gay S&M club by the cops, Marcus with his arm broken and Pierre in handcuffs. The "story" proceeds to unwind in a series of single-take scenes that unfold Memento-style, with each scene giving more context to what we have seen previously. Each scenario depicts actions, dialogue, incident, behavior, and circumstances that the lead characters might have wished didn't happen, ranging from extreme violence through awkward social situations to mild embarrassment. The central character (and possible dreamer of this whole what-if story) emerges as Alex (Monica Bellucci), who suffers the worst in a very hard-to-watch rape sequence in an underpass. Semi-improvised, the scenes all have attack and power as themes, with later/earlier conversational sequences that suggest life isn't all sexual assaults in the dark, showing equal cinematic imagination with the horrors. Arguably, this is not a film most would subject themselves to twice, but it is something that stays in the mind for days after viewing, sparking far more ideas and emotions than most wallow-in-nastiness pictures. --Kim Newman - Amazon.com

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