What if you were told that every moment you experienced and every memory you held dear never happened? Telly Paretta is tormented by the memory of her eight year old son Sam's death in a plane crash 14 months earlier. While trying to work through her grief, and her subsequent estrangement from her husband, she is informed by .. Read more
| Starring | Julianne Moore, Gary Sinise, Anthony Edwards, Alfre Woodard |
|---|---|
| Director | Joseph Ruben |
| Genres | Audio Descriptive, Thriller |
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What if you were told that every moment you experienced and every memory you held dear never happened? Telly Paretta is tormented by the memory of her eight year old son Sam's death in a plane crash 14 months earlier. While trying to work through her grief, and her subsequent estrangement from her husband, she is informed by her psychiatrist that she is suffering from delusion, that her son never existed and that she is fabricating memories.
| Starring | Julianne Moore, Gary Sinise, Anthony Edwards, Alfre Woodard, Linus Roache |
|---|---|
| Director | Joseph Ruben |
| Studio | COLUMBIA TRI-STAR HOME VIDEO |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 27 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Collections | 100 Top Thrillers |
| Genres | Audio Descriptive, Thriller |
| Language | DVD: English, English Audio Description |
| Dubbed | Hungarian, Spanish |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Subtitles | DVD: Arabic, Bulgarian, Croatian, Dutch, English, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Icelandic, Polish, Romanian, Serbian, Slovenian, Spanish, Turkish |
| Released | DVD: 21 Mar 2005 Production year: 2004 |
| Format | DVD |
As the director of Sleeping with the Enemy and The Stepfather, Joseph Ruben knows a thing or two about suspense. So it's surprising that this psychological thriller has no real tension, relying instead on a handful of ruthlessly effective jolts to convey its air of unseen menace. In another of her tormented mother roles, Julianne Moore plays a woman grieving over the death of her eight-year-old son. Told by her psychiatrist (Gary Sinise) that the boy never existed, she's stunned to find all evidence of the child has disappeared and sets out to prove that she's not delusional. While Moore works hard, her performance is undermined by a weak script and ridiculous storyline, which veers from X-Files-style conspiracy paranoia to melodramatic farce. Had Ruben's direction been stronger, the film might have been salvaged. Unfortunately, despite some attractive cinematography, the overall construction is too lazy to paper over the many plot holes.
The concept of erasing memory has fascinated Hollywood of late, although this ambitious thriller approaches it on a far... read more on Time Out
Rather than leading you into a sense of insecurity - i.e. suspense - this film lulls you into a false sense of security ... and then scares the BG's out of you. In at least three key scenes I was geniunly shocked out of my seat - and I'm no jumper. I liked this movie for that alone, because it made me laugh. Those scenes could have killed my grandma - so brilliantly were they placed into the movie - where you'd least expect them - smack bang in the middle of dialogue. Apart from that it's just an enjoyable movie - with a very small twist - but it's so cliche' to have a twist that you won't notice or care -- it's almost like the twist was put there out of compulsion.
Mixed reviews I know but I loved it. Conspiracy at its best and Julianne Moore was fantastic! Yes I jumped - twice - didnt see it coming! Great!
The Forgotten, starring four time Oscar nominee Julianne Moore, has shot straight to the top of the US box office chart, taking $22 million in its opening weekend. The film is the latest hit in a year-long love affair with the horror genre - with The Village, Dawn of the Dead, Resident Evil: Apocalypse; and Exorcist: The Beginning all topping the US chart in recent months. The Forgotten tells the story of a mother (Moore) who is told that a son she claims was lost in a plane crash never in fact Read more