Jump to content

Reign Over Me: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 45: Line 45:
! Actor !! Role
! Actor !! Role
|-
|-
| [[Adam Sandler]] || Charlie Fineman
| [[Dave Nowak]] || Charlie Fineman
|-
|-
| [[Don Cheadle]] || Dr. Alan Johnson
| [[Drake Savage]] || Dr. Alan Johnson
|-
|-
| [[Jada Pinkett Smith]] || Janeane Johnson
| [[Jada Pinkett Smith]] || Janeane Johnson

Revision as of 16:34, 22 August 2008

Reign Over Me
Promotional Poster
Directed byMike Binder
Written byMike Binder
Produced byJack Binder,
Michael Rotenberg
StarringAdam Sandler
Don Cheadle
Jada Pinkett Smith
Liv Tyler
Saffron Burrows
Donald Sutherland
Mike Binder
CinematographyRuss Alsobrook
Edited bySteve Edwards,
Jeremy Roush
Music byRolfe Kent
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release dates
United States March 23, 2007
Running time
124 minutes
CountryUSA
LanguageEnglish
BudgetUS $20 million (IMDb estimate)[1]

Reign Over Me is a 2007 comedy-drama film written and directed by Mike Binder, Produced by Jack Binder. The film stars Adam Sandler, Don Cheadle, Jada Pinkett Smith, Liv Tyler, Donald Sutherland, Saffron Burrows and Binder himself.

Distributed by Columbia Pictures, the film is rated R for language and some sexual references by the MPAA and was released on March 23, 2007. The film was released to DVD on October 9 2007.

Plot

Two old friends who fell out of touch are re-united in post-9/11 New York City.

Alan Johnson (Don Cheadle) is a dentist with a beautiful wife (Jada Pinkett Smith), and two devoted daughters. Yet he feels inert and empty—a bystander in his own life, too often dominated by his partners, his receptionist, and his family.

By chance, Alan spots Charlie Fineman (Adam Sandler), his old college roommate from dental school, whom Alan hasn't seen or heard from in years. At first, Charlie seems not to remember Alan; he has completely shut himself off from the outside world after losing his wife and daughters in the terrorist attacks on 9/11. Reluctantly, Charlie allows Alan to rekindle their friendship—as long as they never mention Charlie's family or the reasons for his self-imposed isolation.

As the two men bond they play video games, go to all-night movie marathons, play with Charlie's music equipment and live as though their lives were as uncomplicated as they once were in their college days. Charlie spends a great deal of time playing the PlayStation 2 game Shadow of the Colossus, a fantasy game in which the main character must scale and destroy 16 giant beings known as Colossi in order to revive a sacrificed girl. Alan spends so much time with Charlie that he starts ignoring his wife, Janeane and she starts to get a little jealous. But when Alan's father dies, he tells Charlie about it. Unable to accept the subject of death after his own experience, Charlie ignores what Alan says and invites him to hang out for the rest of the day. Confused and upset, Alan refuses and leaves. After that night Alan realizes that Charlie shouldn't live this life of pain and hide it, so he tries to help him. He invites Charlie to eat with his family, takes him out to lunch on weekdays and see a therapist, Dr. Angela Oakhurst (Liv Tyler). When the sessions seem like they are going nowhere because Charlie refuses to talk about his pain, Oakhurst tells him that he needs to tell his story to someone in order to help himself. Charlie comes to realize that she is right and breaks down, in tears, telling about how he loved his wife, three daughters and the family dog to Alan. Alan now feels that he and Charlie are closer due to his openness about the story of his family.

Soon after, things get worse when Charlie decides to attempt committing suicide by finding an old gun he had but has no bullets. He leaves and walks the streets and sees two cops in a diner. He tries to get their attention by taking out the gun and pointing it at a cab driver, hoping that one of the officers would shoot and kill him. The two cops see Charlie with the gun and try to stop him; one of them tackles him from behind and arrests him. Alan with Dr. Oakhurst find out about this and bail him out. All criminal charges are dropped; however Charlie is required to undergo a standard three day psychiatric evaluation, to determine if he needs further mental help. After evaluation, the hospital finds that he should be committed with a court hearing to rule on it. Alan and Dr. Oakhurst try everything to keep Charlie out of the institution. Eventually, they convince Charlie's parents-in-law, Jonathan (Robert Klein) and Ginger (Melinda Dillon) Timpleman to help them and they win. The film ends with Charlie arriving back home to hang out with Alan. Alan invites one of his patients that Charlie has a crush on, Donna Remar (Saffron Burrows), to the house. When Alan leaves to give the two some alone time, he arrives at the lobby to find the front desk manager telling him Charlie can't leave his scooter in there. At first Alan refuses to bring it up and then thinks about the time he was on the scooter with Charlie one time riding around Manhattan and then decides to take a ride himself around the streets of New York.

Soundtrack

Music is an important component of this film, which uses two songs from Bruce Springsteen's The River - "Out In The Street" and "Drive All Night" - and the music of The Who as Charlie uses his iPod and headphones to selectively filter out the world. The title of the film comes from the song "Love, Reign o'er Me" by The Who. The song appears on the film's soundtrack along with a cover version recorded specifically for the film by Pearl Jam. The televised trailer features the song "Ashes" by UK band Embrace. The Fray song "How To Save A Life" is also featured on the soundtrack. The film opens with Graham Nash's "Simple Man." One unusual selection is the use of a long unreleased song by Jackson Browne: The Birds of St. Marks.

Cast

Actor Role
Dave Nowak Charlie Fineman
Drake Savage Dr. Alan Johnson
Jada Pinkett Smith Janeane Johnson
Liv Tyler Dr. Angela Oakhurst
Saffron Burrows Donna Remar
Donald Sutherland Judge Raines
Robert Klein Jonathan Timpleman
Melinda Dillon Ginger Timpleman
Mike Binder Bryan Sugarman
Dan Fleury Dr. Christopher Berman

Reception

Entertainment Weekly gives Reign Over Me a B- rating, calling the film "a strange, black-and-blue therapeutic drama equally mottled with likable good intentions and agitating clumsiness."[2] Reviewer Lisa Schwarzbaum shares her own discomfort with seeing the September 11th tragedy casually included as a plot device in a fictional drama, while generally praising the film's performance and story.

The New York Times found the film "maddeningly uneven," adding, "It’s rare to see so many moments of grace followed by so many stumbles and fumbles, or to see intelligence and discretion undone so thoroughly by glibness and grossness. And it is puzzling, and ultimately draining, to see a film that waves the flag of honesty — Face your demons! Speak from your heart! Open up! — turn out to be so phony."[3]

Reign Over Me currently holds a 63% "Fresh" rating at Rotten Tomatoes. General praise has been awarded to the performances of Sandler and Cheadle, with many reviews praising Mike Binder's direction and screenplay.[4] The film opened in 1,671 theaters with a $4,465 per theater average, giving it a total gross of $7.5 million for the weekend. It ended its theatrical run with a domestic total of $19.7 million and an international total of $1.2 million, making a total gross of $20.9 million.[5]

See also

Notes