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| View Larger Image | Spun (Unrated Version) Directed by Jonas Åkerlund Starring Jason Schwartzman, Mickey Rourke, Brittany Murphy, John Leguizamo, Patrick Fugit Sony Pictures
| | List Price: | $14.94 | | Price: | $9.99 | | You Save: | $4.95 (33%) |  | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |  | |  | | Sales Rank: | 3857 | | Release Date: | July 22, 2003 | | Rated: | | | Running Time: | 101 minutes | | Theatrical Release: | January 09, 2009 | | Studio: | Sony Pictures |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Description When college drop-out Ross becomes the local crystal meth cook's personal driver in exchange for free drugs, he has no idea what he's in for. Starring: John Leguizamo (Moulin Rouge, Empire), Brittany Murphy (8 Mile, Just Married), Mena Suvari (American Beauty, American Pie),Jason Schwartzman (Slackers, Rushmore), Patrick Fugit (Almost Famous, White Oleander), Debbie Harry (lead singer of rock group "Blondie"), Mickey Rourke (The Pledge, Get Carter),Eric Roberts (National Security, TV's "Less Than Perfect"). | Amazon.com Spun is an unclassifiable ensemble piece, intentionally bleached of soulfulness and high on visual invention and comic depravity. Set in north Los Angeles, where meth freaks lurch from one motel room to another in search of companionship and a score, the film stars Jason Schwartzman as Ross, whose life is rapidly disintegrating. Fielding phone messages from his mother and trying in vain to reach an old girlfriend, Ross spends most of his time on a feverish circuit with the half-mad Cookie (Mena Suvari) and Nikki (Brittany Murphy), the dangerously paranoid Spider Mike (John Leguizamo), and a macho drugmaker called the Cook (Mickey Rourke). Director Jonas Akerlund's story is nonexistent, but then again Spun is driven by the blurry, hellish energy of a life lived on speed. An obvious influence is Darren Aronofsky's Requiem for a Dream, but Akerlund is interested in nightmarish set pieces than tiny horrors of misfired nerve endings and ravaged time. --Tom Keogh |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 3.5 based on 126 reviews)
| Good job for a "Requiem for a Dream" clone  If it doesn't bother you when a director blatantly rips off another movie, take this one for a spin. It's Requiem for a Dream for the methamphetamine crowd. Not as good, of course, but it's a fun ride. Lots of quick edits, lots of Oliver Stone weird, sweaty, extreme close-ups, and absolutely no substance. It's just a week, or so, in the life of a bunch of speed freaks. Nothing more.
Billy Corgan contributes some good stuff, via Djali Zwan to the soundtrack and gets in a quick cameo. There are lots of cameos alongside the ensemble cast. Leguizamo's a little over the top, and Mena Suvari seemed a little stretched, but all in all not too bad. This is a much better role for Brittany Murphy than Love and Other Disasters. It's a fine line between over-acting and acting like you're freakin' on speed, so I'm not going to complain.
Spun is also surprisingly explicit in a number of ways: Leguizamo's masturbation scene wearing nothing but a sock; the shot of a little turd splashing in the toilet while Sorvino takes a dump; a girl tied to a bed for pretty much the length of the movie, naked and spread eagle with gaffer's tape over her mouth and eyes forced to listen to a skipping CD the whole time.
There is no moral to the story. Heck, there really isn't any story. It's just one big buzz with events. I don't mind that it's a Requiem for a Dream clone in style, not substance. I would imagine this kind of physical film making via power-edits would be difficult to do, and I think this first time director did a credible job. August 15, 2008 | | amazing  amazing movie, it has to be one of the best drug cinema movies ever made.
the whole movie was intense from start to finish and just leaves you in a daze of amazement.
it's a great movie, if you like movies like Requiem for a Dream, you'll absolutely love Spun. July 20, 2008 | | crazy  This movie is seriously "SPUN" unless you had a drug addiction to crank you would not understand this particular movie. the people in this video played their roles very well. April 06, 2008 | | Not as bad as I thought it was.  Spun (Jonas Akerlund, 2002)
The DVD box for Spun has a blurb on it calling it "a classic of drug cinema". Which strikes me as saying "the cutest hemorrhagic fever imaginable" or something like that. When you're in a genre containing such deathless film classics as Half Baked and How High?, it doesn't strike me that you really have to reach all that high to grab the bar, now, do you?
The story revolves around Ross (Rushmore's Jason Schwartzman, whose career has been downhill ever since). Ross is the guy with the car, which makes him very important-- none of the other major characters has one. Ross and his friends (and the series of oddballs he meets on the way), you see, are tweakers-- crystal meth addicts. Most of them, aside from being too stoned to drive, don't have cars because, presumably, they've hocked them to get money to fuel their addictions. But someone's gotta do the driving, and that someone is Ross. As it opens, we meet Ross, his paranoid dealer Spider Mike (John Leguizamo), and Spider Mike's two houseguests, Nikki (Brittany Murphy) and Cookie (Mena Suvari). As things progress, Ross is introduced to Cookie's boyfriend, The Cook (Mickey Rourke), Spider Mike's supplier, who also needs some driving done. The Cook hires Ross to do some driving for him. Which is great, Ross needs the money (and the drugs), except that Ross has his girlfriend (Chloe Hunter, whose body famously appears on the poster for American Beauty) tied to the bed in his apartment. (Why? We don't know.) Along the way, we meet a number of other assorted weirdos, the most interesting of whom is Frisbee (Deadbirds' Patrick Fugit), a black metal devotee who gets involved in a very bizarre love triangle with Spider Mike and Nikki. Plot? Forget plot. This is a slice-of-very-strange-life movie.
When I was watching Spun, I hated it. To some extent, I still do. But a week or so later, I find myself impressed with a number of aspects of the movie. Kudos to both Suvari and Murphy, both of whom have been typecast as glamour girls for years, for taking roles that are unglamorous in the extreme. The number of cameos in the movie is astounding-- Deborah Harry, Ron Jeremy, Billy Corgan, Rob Halford, Peter Stormare, and I'm only touching the tip of the iceberg. And for a plotless movie, it does go by quickly (this could well have to do with the insane editing-- Akerlund normally makes his paycheck as a music video director, and the camerawork here has a great deal in common with his infamous video for The Prodigy's "Smack My [...] Up"). Schwartzman is just kind of pulled along by everything, but a number of the other performances in here range from the competent (Harry, Fugit, Suvari) to the downright wicked (this may well be Rourke's best role since Angel Heart). And while the whole movie doesn't hold up, there are some blisteringly funny scenes (Corgan has one line, but in the greater context of its scene, it's hysterical).
So-- not as awful as I first thought, but I probably won't be sitting through it again any time soon. **
January 03, 2008 | | STYLISH & ENGROSSING LOOK INTO A SEEDY WORLD!  Watching this film, which plays like a drug addict's nightmare in rehab, was disturbing! It is really a fascinating film which will make you laugh and repulse you at the same time. The entire cast play very realistic pathetic characters with some interesting camera work and animated cut scenes round out this very original film. This film isn't for everyone, but if you like these types of movies, this is a must see! The DVD transfer is very good and there are some cool extras. October 07, 2007 | |
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