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Reign Over Me on DVD (2006)

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Average rating: (67%)
1215618162037
3.5
 
Starring: Adam Sandler | Don Cheadle | Jada Pinkett Smith | Liv Tyler | Saffron Burrows | Donald Sutherland | Robert Klein
Director: Mike Binder
Studio: COLUMBIA PICTURES
Run time: 124 mins
Certificate: 15
User collections: My Top 20 Films | Comedy Actors Turned Serious | My favourite films
Genres: Drama
Languages: English, English Audio Description
Hearing-impaired: English
Subtitles: Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, Hindi, Norwegian, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish
Released: 20/08/2007
Also Available on:  Also Available on: BLU-RAY  Also Available on: DIGITAL

Brief synopsis of Reign Over Me

Alan Johnson (Cheadle), a New York dentist, runs into his college roommate, Charlie Fineman (Sandler), by chance after Fineman loses his family in the September 11 tragedy. The two re-spark their friendship, beginning a tentative journey towards recovery...

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 starsReign Over Me

A customer from Wales , 24/04/2007

'A comedian at the Oscars, The saddest man of all' sang Will Ferrel at this year's Oscars and next year I fear we may once again see an example of this when Adam Sandler fails to get a deserved nomination for Reign Over Me.

Don Cheadle plays Alan, an uptight dentist who doesn't really enjoy his life. His wife is domineering and his work partners treat him with no respect. One day he bumps into his college roommate Charlie (Sandler) whose family were killed on 9/11. Charlie cannot deal with his loss and has lost touch with the world. Alan and Charlie begin to hang out again and slowly help each other with their problems.

This is Sandler back in Punch Drunk Love territory. Whilst PDL relied in some ways on Sandlers penchant for anger, this performance is more reserved. This makes the moments when he does lose it all the more powerful. Cheadle does an admirable job in supporting Sandler and the rest of the cast, including Liv Tyler, Jada Pinkett Smith and Saffron Burrows, all give good performances. But this is the Sandler show.

It is a very good film, not to emotional and with some geniunely funny moments. Plus the soundtrack is one for Springsteen fans, with The River album being an instrinsic part of the plot.

If you are expecting the Adam Sandler of Happy Gilmore you may be disappointed, but if you like good, thought-provoking films then this one is for you.

  71 out of 72 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 1 starsReign over me

A customer from middx , 21/11/2007

Adam Sandler in a serious role? This film was rubbish,whoever gave it 4 stars?

  20 out of 21 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsFunny and sad, silly and wise- a masterpiece.

JJTimothy from Chilton, County Durham [Highly rated reviewer] , 21/09/2007

Alan, successful but restless, encounters his college room-mate Charlie whose wife and daughters died in the 9/11 atrocity. Charlie is a case study in PTSD, completely unable to come to terms with his loss and barely functioning from day to day, and Alan resolves to help him.

Where do I start?

The word comedy can be terribly abused when used as a prefix, as in comedy-thriller, often meaning “not very good”- an excuse in fact and it doesn't always bode well for the comedy side of the equation either. For that reason alone I hesitate to call this a comedy-drama- the drama takes precedence over the comedy but both are developed from character which is as it should be. A drama-comedy then- rich in both elements with neither cheapened by the other in a film which is serious without being po-faced. I laughed often, smiled much and, if I didn't actually burst into tears at any point, I did wipe my eyes and clear my throat occasionally- in a gruff, manly way you understand.

Both Alan (Don Cheadle) and Charlie (Adam Sandler) are in a rut. Alan feels hemmed in by his family and unsupported by the partners in his dental practice when he faces a sexual harassment accusation from a patient while Charlie's rut is the excuse he need to hide from the tragedy that haunts his every waking moment. Finding his refuge in computer games, a record collection and an endless project to remodel his kitchen Charlie reacts with terror and even violence to any reminder of his family but can accept Alan because their time together pre-dates his heart-ache. Their renewed friendship has a good influence, it's the catalyst they both need to develop with Alan loosening up and Charlie beginning to acknowledge that he needs help though not without cost.

Cheadle is quietly excellent as one has come to expect though he gets a splendid grandstanding moment confronting his partners. I thought Punch Drunk Love too wilfully eccentric to accept as a serious acting gig for Sandler but he is a revelation here. The scene when he finally starts to open up about his family is heart-rending and I hope to see it used on Oscar night to illustrate his nomination for best supporting actor. A later, quieter moment with his in-laws after things have come to a head speaks volumes about his character's progress. Huge credit is due to writer-director Mike Binder whose script has hardly a word out of place, its use of the 9/11 attack being neither exploitative nor sensational. He directs with a great sense of place (helped by beautifully detailed photography) and, of course, draws fine performances from his cast- even Saffron Burrows who can be terrible.

My mother worked in mental health for many years, including caring for ex-servicemen and in grief counselling. She's a great one for picking fictional cases apart but couldn't fault Reign Over Me. I thought it quietly astonishing and recommend it unreservedly.

Extras are piffling apart from a brief interview with Binder.

Yeah- that's a start...

  15 out of 15 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsrollercoaster

billbo [Highly rated reviewer] , 12/10/2007

Adam Sandler as youve never seen him before.. This film was a really good film, it had me smiling one scene whilst the next scene had me reaching for the hankies..

Great to see thar Sandler can play a straight role as well as he does his comedy roles.

Moving subject that is delt with subtley but the impact it has stays with you for hours after the film has finished.

Well worth a shot !!!

  12 out of 12 people found this review helpful
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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 4 starsSandler delivers a star performance

AC444 from Plymouth , 10/08/2008

Forgot gooky comedies Adam Sandler is known for... Reign Over Me see the man deliver humour in a far more subtle manner (as well as looking like a 60's Bob Dylan) and as a result has gone up in my estimations of him 10x. Numerous reviews here give you a clearer picture of what the film is about, but suffice to say this is a thought provoking film about friendship and if you stick through the occassionally slow slog you will be rewarded. Couple with a great soundtrack (Pearl Jam's version of The Who's Love Reign O'er Me over closing credits is superb) and this is one of the strongest films I have seen of late. Not really comedy so don't expect to laugh out loud none stop, but not really drama but somewhere between the two - just a good solid film.

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Rated - 4 starsENGAGING

FINFIN from ESSEX, ENGLAND , 11/08/2008

Great acting from the two lead guys. Builds slowly but keeps you engaged, wanted to see more.

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