| The Fountain [Blu-ray] | ![The Fountain [Blu-ray]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51sdoKzCBbL._SL160_.jpg)
enlarge | Director: Darren Aronofsky Actors: Hugh Jackman, Rachel Weisz, Sean Patrick Thomas, Ellen Burstyn, Mark Margolis Studio: Warner Category: DVD
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Avg. Customer Rating: 365 reviews Sales Rank: 9340
Format: Ac-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Subtitled, Widescreen Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Dubbed) Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Media: Blu-ray Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 96 Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3 Dimensions (in): 6.6 x 4.9 x 0.5
MPN: 11737 UPC: 085391117377 EAN: 0085391117377 ASIN: B000O7667K
Theatrical Release Date: November 22, 2006 Release Date: May 15, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: 5 Star Seller!! Completely Brand New & Sealed- , Official US Release, Region 1, Not an Import or Bootleg- Ships within 24 Hours- Excellent Customer Service, 100% Guaranteed- Buy with Confidence
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Amazon.com Science fiction and romance collide in The Fountain, the ambitious third feature from director Darren Aronofsky (Pi, Requiem for a Dream), who labored for four years to complete this epic-sized love story that stretches across centuries and galaxies. Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz (Aronofsky's real-life companion) play lovers in each of the film's three settings--16th century Europe and America (Jackman is a Spanish explorer searching for Incan magic), the present day (Jackman is a doctor attempting to cure his dying wife), and the 26th century (Jackman is a space traveler seeking a gateway to the afterlife)--who struggle mightily to stay united, only to lose each other time and again. Aronofsky may not have chosen the easiest presentation for audiences to absorb his theories on the lasting qualities of life and the transformative powers of death--the final sequence, in particular, with a bald Jackman floating through space in a bubble, harks back uncomfortably to "head movies" of the late '60s--but his leads have considerable chemistry (and look terrific to boot), which goes a long way towards securing viewers' hopes for a happy ending. Critical reception for The Fountain has been nothing short of bloodthirsty, with Cannes audiences booing, but there are elements to enjoy here, even if the premise throws one for a loop. Ellen Burstyn (who earned an Oscar nomination for Requiem) delivers a typically solid performance as Jackman's boss in the present day sequence, and special effects (most done without the benefit of CGI) are also impressive given the film's low budget (spurred by a mid-production shutdown after original stars Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett ankled the picture). And science-fiction fans whose tastes run towards the metaphysical (Asimov, Le Guin) will appreciate the attempt to present the genre in a serious light. --Paul Gaita
Product Description Warner Brothers The Fountain (Blu-Ray) Yesterday, today, tomorrow. Past, present, future. Through time and space,one man embarks on a bold 1000-year odyssey to defeat humankind's most indomitable foe: Death. HughJackman plays that man, devoted to one woman (Rachel Weisz) and determined to protect her from forces that threaten her existence. His quest leads him to a Tree of Life...and to an adventure into eternity. Darren Aronofsky ("Pi," "Requiem For A Dream") directs, continuing his string of imaginative,involving filmmaking with a tale alive with ideasand filled with astonishing vistas. "Not many films can blow your mind and break your heart at the same time, but this one will" (Drew McWeeny, Ain'tIt Cool News).
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| Customer Reviews: Read 360 more reviews...
wow. September 25, 2008 Instantly became one of my favorite movies. Cinematography is incredible. Love the soundtrack.
The Fountain: Romance, Sci-Fi and Mythology All Rolled Into One September 19, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Having read a review or two I was geared up to find the movie incoherent; instead I found it fabulous, insightful, provocative and deeply moving. I highly recommend it.
The story focuses on two characters, Tommy and Izzi, who are husband and wife. Tommy is a scientific researcher trying to find a cure for cancer, and he has a personal investment in his research, since Izzi has terminal cancer. Izzi is writing a book called The Fountain, and the queen of spain and the conquistador in the story are also Tom and Izzi (and played once again by Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz). We also meet Tom in a bald futuristic setting in which Jackman looks remarkably like Peter Gabriel, in which he encounters Izzi in memories and flashbacks, but I will say more about that later. SPOILER WARNING: You may want to buy or rent it and watch it before reading further, although what follows may actually help prepare you for the movie (some viewers whose reviews I read did not seem to follow what was going on).
Izzi has come to terms with her death, inspired in part by studying Mayan beliefs about death and the afterlife for her book. She comes to understand that death is as natural as life, that life comes from death. She mentions at one point that her father (if I remember correctly) had a seed planted on his grave, so that now he is no longer there, but has become one with the tree, and whenever a sparrow eats from the fruit of the tree, her father soars with it through the air. Death, she says, is the "road to awe".
Tommy, on the other hand, views death as simply another disease like any other, for which one day they will find the cure. In fact, his research includes the discovery of a plant, brought back from a South American rainforest, that he hoped would cure cancer, but in fact reverses aging. As it turns out, it also can reverse cancer, but this is not discovered until Izzi has died.
Some viewers have interpreted the movie as a true story about individuals who have found the secret of immortality, and so we encounter them across vast stretches of time. This, however, cannot be correct since it cannot make sense of the plotlines. It is a story about Tommy's attempt to find closure, symbolized by his attempts to write a final chapter for Izzi's book, which she left unfinished and asked him to complete.
In the far-future space setting, which I understand to be Tommy's inner world, he has in fact discovered the youth-restoring properties of the tree they discovered in South America. He has planted that very sort of tree over Izzi's grave, and she has become one with the tree. In the far distant future, he has taken the tree in a spaceship that is essentially an eco-bubble to the distant star that they Mayans called Shebulba, and which they viewed as their underworld. Izzi had been fascinated with the Mayans' choice of this dying star (as opposed to a healthy one) as their underworld, and Tommy envisages himself taking her (as the tree) there, so that when the star finally dies, she can be reborn. But he is haunted on his journey by Izzi's request that he finish the book, which he still has not done. The tree dies just before they get to Shebulba, just as in reality Izzi died just before they discovered the benefits of the tree extract that could have saved her.
Finally, he must come to grips with Izzi's death and say goodbye. He finishes the book. In the last chapter, the conquistador finds the tree of life and drinks its sap, but instead of living forever, plants sprout from him and he is quickly overgrown. In this very symbolic ending, eternal life is shown to consist not in preserving someone or something statically, but in being part of the ongoing cycles of life, the healthy process that is the life of our world and our universe. As the film closes, Tommy plants a seed on Izzi's grave, and says goodbye.
The films is full of symbolism, both from Genesis and from elsewhere. Although the movie is called "The Fountain" (i.e. of Youth), the key imagery is of the tree of life. This overlaps with Mayan mythology of the First Father who gives his life to create the world, symbolized or thought of as a tree. There are also several moments in the film that begin with an inverted perspective, perhaps hinting that there is a sense in which we see reality inverted, particularly when it comes to death and living forever. And there is the powerful sense that love is the tree of life, since it is in connection with the one we love that we most often use the language of immortality, and most desperately desire to overcome death.
The most powerful moment(s) in the film is perhaps the moment that Tommy keeps revisiting in his mind. It was a moment when he was at his lab, and Izzi comes in to tell him that the first snow had begun to fall, and they always would go out to walk together in the first snow. He tells her he cannot, his colleagues are waiting for him, so she goes alone. He revisits this moment more than once over the course of the movie, and the last time he makes a different choice. He goes after her, unwilling to be hindered even by colleagues, and walks with her in the snow. It is at this point that he realizes the meaning of life: not to spend our time trying to make the one we love immortal, but to spend and cherish each moment we have with them.
[This review originally appeared on the Exploring Our Matrix blog]
the fountain on blu-ray September 3, 2008 AWESOME! This movie looks amazing. We have a PS3 to watch blu-ray discs on and they look AMAZING.
I keep trying but still...... August 19, 2008 I have an open mind and I do get the metaphysical-epic-universal-across time love story but...I've seen this movie twice now and I still don't get all of it. The cinematography was really very good, but I found the transition to the different time periods jarring. I enjoyed the 16th century story and was wishing there was a bit more of that. I still have no idea where the future time period was heading. My friends and family were not left comtemplating the different scenes or meanings...we were just trying to make some sense of it overall.
'The Last Man' resurected as 'The Fountain' (spoilers embedded!) August 11, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I have finally gotten around to watching Darren Aronofsky's latest film 'The Fountain' (originally titled 'The Last Man'). I had heard that this film was, according to Aronofsky, something that he had been 'building up' to since his stunningly 'toxic' 'Requiem for a Dream' and while 'The Fountain' is 'light years' away from 'Requiem' (although Aronofsky continues to employ the 'focus' of the eye, both interior and exterior in both films), it certainly expands upon Aronofsky's creative visual scope and his determination as a director to involve his actors in the physicality (and just as crucial in the 'mentality') of their roles.
According to the major critiques on this site, the majority of the reviewers didn't 'understand' the film, and I would gather that part of that is the intentional visual effects that Aronofsky has utilized through the multiple 'allusive' aspects 'contained' in The Fountain'. This is shown in Aronofsky's repeated questioning of the issues of time, and the 'limitations' of the human condition (that we are 'bound' in a mortal body with a 'linear' conception of our life). I have read some comparisons with Andrei Tarkovsky's films, particularly 'Solaris', and I would agree that Aronofsky is closer to 'approximating' the interior/exterior 'visual reflections' of time, space and spirituality that Tarkovsky envisioned, not only in 'Solaris', but in all of his films. Many people do not 'get' or 'understand' Tarkovsky's cinematic vision either as it was not intended to supply firm answers (or definitive conclusions) towards these themes, as he was more interested in exploring their poetic possibilities in film and questioning the 'reality' of the world of the characters (which is a 'reflection' of how we emplace and view these 'realities' also).
While I am not yet ready to place Aronofsky on the same 'cinematic plane' as Tarkovsky, 'The Fountain' certainly deserves to be recognized as a creative, ambitious cinematic 'accounting' of a meld of 'science-fiction' and human spirituality. After watching the film on DVD, I have to say I am disappointed that I did not see 'The Fountain' on the big screen, because visually its effects are astoundingly hypnotic and beautiful. One bonus to viewing the DVD 'version' is that I learned that the visual effects, the nebulous backgrounds, were created by shooting micro-photos of reactive substances in a Petri dish (which were then merged onto the film) rather than using computer-generated imagery, which allowed my admiration for Aronofsky's visual attention to the overall 'scheme' within 'The Fountain' to expand even further. These applications within 'The Fountain' of physical and visual 'chemical reactions' also put me in mind (or is that sight?) of the great independent American filmmaker Stan Brakhage's creative use of elemental compounds within his cinematic 'explorations'.
I have been speaking of Aronofsky's cinematic scope or broad explorations of the human conception of time, space (in which our bodies occupy), and spirituality in 'The Fountain' and while the film 'seems' to go to many realms, (16th century Spain, 'present' laboratories, 'outer space'), what is visually `contained' as the 'primary focus' in the film are the two main characters Thomas (Hugh Jackman), and Izzy (Rachel Weisz). Indeed, it is through the 'states' of these characters that the film is 'imagined', as Izzy has composed a story (imagining Thomas as the Conquistador?), and Thomas (through reading and hearing it) is 'imagining' it (and attempting to 'finish' it). My interpretation of this film is Thomas's struggle with accepting Izzy's mortal state, and therefore attempting to 'bring her back' by a 'journey' that is portrayed in the outer/inner reaches of time and space (this is particularly pronounced in the films lighting 'entrances' from light to dark and vice versa). Since he cannot accomplish 'conquering' Izzy's mortal fate through science, he 'reaches' (in an interior 'vision') to the myths of religion (symbolized in the Tree, the lotus posture). In the 'end' we see Thomas physically letting go, and burying the seed at Izzy's grave (a larger reference to the sphere i.e. world) that will (may?) continue the cycle of life.
The only reason I have given this film four stars is that while I believed Hugh Jackman gave an outstanding performance (particularly in 'sacrificing' his musculature and his hair), I thought that Rachel Weisz's performance was shaky in parts of the film. I still believe that Aronofsky 'pulled' the best out of her role (which is evident if you watch her in the featurette's 'takes'). All together this is a beautiful, inventive example of American filmmaking by Aronofosky and if he did not make another film after 'The Fountain' (hopefully this will not be the case) it would 'stand' as his cinematic masterpiece.
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