Showing posts with label Romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romance. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Barefoot




IMDb
The "black sheep" son of a wealthy family meets a young psychiatric patient who's been raised in isolation her entire life. He then takes the naive young woman home for his brother's wedding.


Rotten Tomatoes
The "black sheep" son (Scott Speedman) of a wealthy family meets a free-spirited, but sheltered woman (Evan Rachel Wood). To convince his family that he's finally straightened out his life, he takes her home for his brother's wedding where an improbable romance blooms, as she impresses everyone with her genuine, simple charms. (c) Roadside Attractions
barefoot movie | Barefoot (2014) - Cover DVD Movie:
Full movie on Pubfilm

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Love Life




Rotten Tomatoes
The marriage of convenience between a former professional baseball player and his trophy begins to crack at the foundation in a provocative examination of modern mores from director Damion Dietz. Joe is a former MLB star who now works as a coach. Mary is a trust fund girl who only wanted an emotional partner. Despite their agreement to permit extramarital affairs as long as there is no outside emotional attachment, things begin to slowly fall apart as Joe begins to succumb to his driving homosexual desires. When Joe becomes involved with a handsome-but-unstable landscaper and an old college friend coerces Mary into confronting her lesbian past, the couple is forced to choose between a comfortable life defined by lies, or an uncertain future in which both embrace their true natures regardless of the social ramification.


IMDb
An intimately observed love story, LOVE LIFE carefully examines the sexually secretive marriage of Joe and Mary Hahn. When a passionate extra-marital encounter leaves Joe with an emotional connection he can't break - and when a beautiful friend from Mary's college years resurfaces with her own agenda, the marriage of convenience begins to crack, revealing the truth, strength and hope buried within all of them.
Written by new media entertainment, llc


Full movie on Movieovh

Monday, January 18, 2016

Last Tango in Paris




IMDb
A young Parisian woman meets a middle-aged American businessman who demands their clandestine relationship be based only on sex.


Rotten Tomatoes
In Bernardo Bertolucci's art-house classic, Marlon Brando delivers one of his characteristically idiosyncratic performances as Paul, a middle-aged American in "emotional exile" who comes to Paris when his estranged wife commits suicide. Chancing to meet young Frenchwoman Jeanne (Maria Schneider), Paul enters into a sadomasochistic, carnal relationship with her, indirectly attacking the hypocrisy all around him through his raw, outrageous sexual behavior. Paul also hopes to purge himself of his own feelings of guilt, brilliantly (and profanely) articulated in a largely ad-libbed monologue at his wife's coffin. If the sexual content in Last Tango is uncomfortably explicit (once seen, the infamous "butter scene" is never forgotten), the combination of Brando's acting, Bertolucci's direction, Vittorio Storaro's cinematography, and Gato Barbieri's music is unbeatable, creating one of the classic European art movies of the 1970s, albeit one that is not for all viewers. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Full movie on MovieSub

Saturday, January 16, 2016

The LuckyOne




IMDb
A Marine travels to Louisiana after serving three tours in Iraq and searches for the unknown woman he believes was his good luck charm during the war.


Rotten Tomatoes
U.S. Marine Sergeant Logan Thibault (Efron) returns from his third tour of duty in Iraq, with the one thing he credits with keeping him alive--a photograph he found of a woman he doesn't even know. Learning her name is Beth (Schilling) and where she lives, he shows up at her door, and ends up taking a job at her family-run local kennel. Despite her initial mistrust and the complications in her life, a romance develops between them, giving Logan hope that Beth could be much more than his good luck charm. -- (C) Warner Bros


Full movie on Pubfilm

Friday, January 15, 2016

A thosand Kisses Deep




IMDb
An unsettling drama that cinematically captures and recreates the psycho-analytic experience.



Rotten Tomatoes
How well do you know yourself and those you love? Returning home from work, Mia witnesses an aged woman leap from a window. Scattered around the old woman's broken, lifeless body Mia discovers shredded pieces from a beloved photograph of herself and her former lover Ludwig. Highly unnerved, Mia begs Max, the buildings' custodian , to let her into the deceased woman's flat. While inside this strangely familiar place, Mia recognizes the contents as her own. Confused and disturbed by what lies before her, she bolts back and forth in time where she is forced to realize it was her very own life that ended before her. Now, the only way to safeguard her future is to go back to her past and confront the man she loves deeply but dreads most.

Full movie on Pubfilm

Thursday, January 14, 2016

The Artist




IMDb
A silent movie star meets a young dancer, but the arrival of talking pictures sends their careers in opposite directions.


Rotten Tomatoes
Hollywood 1927. George Valentin (Jean Dujardin) is a silent movie superstar. The advent of the talkies will sound the death knell for his career and see him fall into oblivion. For young extra Peppy Miller (Berenice Bejo), it seems the sky's the limit - major movie stardom awaits. The Artist tells the story of their interlinked destinies. -- (C) Weinstein


Full movie on Pubfilm

Monday, January 11, 2016

Close to the Moon




IMDb
A Romanian police officer teams up with a small crew of old friends from the World War II Jewish Resistance to pull off a heist by convincing everyone at the scene of the crime that they are only filming a movie.



Rotten Tomatoes
A band of Romanian freedom fighters pull the crime of the century in this gripping heist film based on an incredible true story. Bucharest, 1959: with anti-Semitism on the rise, a group of Jewish WWII resistance members, led by a police inspector (The Imitation Game's Mark Strong) and an academic (Academy Award-nominee Vera Farmiga), reteam for an audacious act of political agitation. Posing as a movie crew, they hold up the Romanian National Bank by making it look like a film shoot. But what comes next is even more unbelievable when the group is handed down a punishment as outlandish as their crime. Game of Thrones' Harry Lloyd co-stars in this slyly comic satire ripped from the strange-but-true pages of history.


Full movie on Pubfilm

Sunday, January 10, 2016

This Means War



IMDb
Two top CIA operatives wage an epic battle against one another after they discover they are dating the same woman.


Rotten Tomatoes
The world's deadliest CIA operatives are inseparable partners and best friends until they fall for the same woman. Having once helped bring down entire enemy nations, they are now employing their incomparable skills and an endless array of high-tech gadgetry against their greatest nemesis ever - each other. -- (C) Fox


Full Movie on Pubfilm

Thursday, January 7, 2016

From Begining to End



IMDb
Two brothers develop a very close relationship as they are growing up in an idyllic and happy family. When they are young adults their relationship becomes very intimate, romantic, and sexual.



Variety

Everyone loves each other a bit too much in "From Beginning to End," Aluizio Abranches' sunny ode to an incestuous coupling between half-brothers.

Everyone loves each other a bit too much in “From Beginning to End,” Aluizio Abranches’ sunny ode to an incestuous coupling between half-brothers. Shifting from earlier arthouse stylings (“The Three Marias”) to a telenovela glossiness, the helmer-scripter portrays this odd bond as if it’s completely natural, literally playing it, um, straight. Gay-niche distrib TLA picked up Stateside rights, and while the male flesh on display is certainly a draw, most auds will find the childhood scenes just creepy. Beefcake plus controversy explains the initially strong Brazilian B.O. following a late November debut.
Francisco (Lucas Cotrim), 12, is unnaturally close to 6-year-old half-brother Thomas (Gabriel Kaufmann). Mom Julieta (Julia Lemmertz) and Thomas’ dad, Alexandre (Fabio Assuncao), think it’s lovely, though viewers might think otherwise watching Thomas admire Francisco doing his exercises. Thirty-seven minutes in and 15 years later, Francisco (Joao Gabriel Vasconcellos) and Thomas (Rafael Cardoso) decide they need to grab onto their love, since nothing lasts. Crisis comes when Thomas makes the Olympic swim team and has to train in Russia. (Really? Brazil’s pools aren’t good enough?) Neither Lemmertz nor Assuncao acquits himself with honor, but surface attractions abound.

From Beginning to End

Brazil-Argentina-Spain

Production

A TLA Releasing (in U.S.)/Downtown Filmes (in Brazil) release of a Pequena Central Filmes, Lama Filmes (Brazil)/Takoira Films (Argentina)/Monfort Producciones (Spain) production, in association with Estudios Quanta, Teleimage, Europa Filmes. (International sales: Wide Management, Paris.) Produced by Fernando Libonati, Aluizio Abranches, Marco Nanni. Executive producer, Olivia Guimaraes. Directed, written by Aluizio Abranches.

Crew

Camera (color, widescreen), Ueli Steiger; editor, Fabio S. Limma; music, Andre Abujamra; production designers, Bruno Schmidt, Lulu Continentino; costume designer, Antonio Guedes. Reviewed at Berlin Film Festival (market), Feb. 15, 2010. Original title: Do comeco ao fim. Portuguese, Spanish dialogue. Running time: 95 MIN.

With

Julia Lemmertz, Fabio Assuncao, Jean Pierre Noher, Louise Cardoso, Gabriel Kaufmann, Lucas Cotrim, Rafael Cardoso, Joao Gabriel Vasconcellos, Mausi Martinez, Fernanda Felix, Eduardo Coutinho.

Full Movie on Twomovie

Saturday, January 2, 2016

Child's Play 4 Bride of Chucky

Love Jennifer Tilly



IMDb
Chucky, the doll possessed by a serial killer, discovers the perfect mate to kill and revive into the body of another doll.



Rotten Tomatoes
This horror film, directed by Ronnie Yu, marked a return (after an eight-year lapse) of Chucky and the Child's Play series that began in 1988. At the moment of his death, the spirit of former serial killer Charles Lee Ray was mystically relocated in the doll Chucky (voice of Brad Dourif). After being salvaged from the evidence morgue by his ex-girlfriend Tiffany (Jennifer Tilly) and a corrupt cop, Chucky is put back in action when Tiffany sews his pieces back together and works a voodoo spell to revive his sinister self. Tiffany sees her dreams of marriage aren't working out, so she keeps Chucky locked away. After an escape, Chucky electrocutes Tiffany by pushing a radio into the bathtub, delivering a chant that puts the spirit of Tiffany into a bridal figurine. Chucky's amulet can switch them back into their original human forms, so they head for New Jersey where the amulet is buried -- putting cops in motion, along with car-crash carnage. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi


full movie on FFilms
And Solarmovie
And hdmovie14

Monday, December 28, 2015

Wet Hot American Summer



IMDb
Set on the last day of camp, in the hot summer of 1981, a group of counselors try to complete their unfinished business before the day ends.



Rotten Tomatoes
The setting is Camp Firewood, the year 1981. It's the last day before everyone goes back to the real world, but there's still a summer's worth of unfinished business to resolve. At the center of the action is camp director Beth, who struggles to keep order while she falls in love with the local astrophysics professor. He is busy trying to save the camp from a deadly piece of NASA's Skylab which is hurtling toward earth. All that, plus: a dangerous waterfall rescue, love triangles, misfits, cool kids, and talking vegetable cans. The questions will all be resolved, of course, at the big talent show at the end of the day.


Full movie on HDMovie14
And Solarmovie


Monday, December 14, 2015

A Wonderful Christmas Time




IMDb
Two weeks before Christmas, Noel is left home alone in Porthcawl, a sleepy seaside town in South Wales, and dumped by his long term girlfriend for another guy; a taller and more rugged alternative. Faced with the unknown, he turns to primal scream therapy with his self-taught therapist Simon and retreats to the past, reminiscing with his old school pal Steve. A chance encounter with Cherie, a disillusioned actress who has returned home to reflect on her past and present to begin a more fulfilled life, leads Noel to open up and share his passions. Their shared love of music, eighties movies, and all things Christmas encourages a celebratory spirit, and the possibility of a Happy New Year. Will the insecurities of recent break­ups, seasonal intoxication, and mis­communication conspire to ruin their fun or will they simply have a Wonderful Christmas Time?


Screen Daily
Dir/scr: Jamie Adams. UK. 2014. 90mins
A low-budget but gently entertaining romantic comedy charmer, Jamie Adams’s A Wonderful Christmas Time is almost a Welsh mumblecore (except there isn’t too much mumbling) thanks to its unassuming improv style and twentysomething sensibility. Following on from his film Benny & Jolene, it marks out Adams as savvy talent able to bring out the best in his talented cast.
A Wonderful Christmas Time is a genial and gently warm-hearted little film – low budget to be sure, but made with a whole lot of heart.
The film, which has had a smattering of screenings in the UK prior to a VOD platform, is worth checking out. Its tale of stuttering and stumbling love may well be a familiar one, but this Porthcawl set film is genuinely engaging and watchable, thanks to a large degree to the innate charm of lead actress Laura Haddock (who starred in The Inbetweeners and recent genre film Storage 24).
When her Cherie meets gloomy – and in therapy – Noel (Dylan Edwards) at the edge of a cliff (where he is trying a little scream therapy) things seem very familiar plot-wise. He has recently been dumped by his girlfriend while she is a disillusioned actress who has returned home to reflect on her past and maybe begin a more fulfilled life. Through luck and circumstance they end up on a boozy ‘double date’ with his pal Steve (Ian Smith) and her friend Mandi (an impressive Mandeep Dhillon), but she doesn’t to be the rebound girlfriend.
Rather engagingly she proposes setting him up on a series of dates (well, three) that are designed to fail. She shadows him, and when it is clear he is ‘dated’ enough they begin a tentative and affectionate romance. The Christmas and New Year backdrop add extra frisson to the proceedings as romance and misunderstandings abound before a stumbling block in the form of the arrival of Cherie’s former boyfriend.
The film was shot over a five-day period with the cast improvising from a scene-by-scene outline, and while it does have its clichéd moments (and what rom-com doesn’t?) it also feels fresh and honest, with the central relationship between Laura Haddock and Dylan Edwards especially tender and sparky. A Wonderful Christmas Time is a genial and gently warm-hearted little film – low budget to be sure, but made with a whole lot of heart.
Full movie on Pubfilmno1

Saturday, December 12, 2015

Bitter Moon





IMDb
Nigel Dobson is an English perfect gentleman, married to equally respectable Fiona. On a cruise heading for India, they meet a highly unconventional couple, American unpublished would-be literary celebrity Oscar, in a wheelchair, and his much younger Parisian wife, Mimi. Oscar insists to tell his unsettling life story to Nigel, who is too polite to refuse although its gore content, shamelessly explicit details and foul Yankee language rather disgust the well-bred Brit, yet becomes also fascinated. Oscar tells how he found by chance in Mimi a willing partner for sex, ever pushing their boundaries. When he tires of spiraling passionate devotion to her, the tables turn: Mimi begs Oscar to stay with her at any price, and gets what she bargained for, sadistic scorn and abuse till she's a mere shadow of her former self, yet is finally abandoned on a flight to Martinique. Later Oscar has a car accident, and Mimi returns to Paris to make sure he is condemned to a wheelchair for life, this time utterly dependent on her, no longer free to choose accepting her abuse, yet they get married. Meanwhile Fiona tires of waiting for Nigel during Oscar's story sessions and spends time with flirtatious Italian Dado. During the New year's Eve party, things come to a surprisingly real and personal closure, not in the least for Nigel...
Written by KGF Vissers



RobertEbert
The returns are in from Europe and the coasts, and the critics have found Roman Polanski's "Bitter Moon" an embarrassment: It is too melodramatic, too contrived, too overwrought, too overacted. Polanski has come unhinged. His portrait of a doomed marriage may be high porn but it is low art.
What bothers some of the critics, I suspect, is the audacity which Polanski exhibits by casting his own wife, Emmanuelle Seigner, in the central role -- as a voracious seductress with black widow tendencies, whose amusement is to blind men in the headlights of her sexuality, and step on the gas. But "Bitter Moon" is nothing if it is not audacious, Polanski is far beyond concern over matters of taste, and his wife at least never seems miscast in a role which would have stopped many another actress cold in her tracks.
His story unfolds aboard an ocean liner, where an embittered husband, paralyzed and in a wheelchair, buttonholes a complete stranger and begins to tell him the story of his marriage. The stranger would like to escape, but cannot. For one thing he grows fascinated by the story. For another he is mesmerized by the man's wife, who has perfected that trick of looking a man boldly in the eye until, by looking away, he concedes sexual supremacy. Hour after hour, day after day, the sordid story unspools, and in flashbacks we see a romance that turns into a dangerous obsession.
Oscar, the man in the wheelchair is played by Peter Coyote, as a sardonic, self-loathing drunk who frankly holds out the bait of his wife as a lure to keep the stranger listening. Nigel, the stranger is a well-behaved, bashful Englishman (played by Hugh Grant, in much the same role he also plays in "Sirens" and "Four Weddings And A Funeral"). Seigner is Mimi, Oscar's wife, a bold exhibitionist.
And Kristin Scott Thomas is Fiona, Nigel's wife -- a cold, distant, somewhat dry woman who would seem to offer little competition for Mimi's juicy come-ons.
As Oscar describes how he met Mimi, we see their marriage in long flashbacks. At first it is a romance, pure and simple. Then boredom begins to creep in -- and, worse, antidotes to boredom. Mimi likes sadomasochistic fun and games. Oscar is fascinated. The two of them retreat into their marriage and pull the door closed behind them; in a kind of game of sexual chicken, they go farther and farther, acting out kinky fantasies until finally . . . well, we find out how Oscar ended up in the wheelchair.
These stories should act upon Nigel as a warning, but, predictably, he is fascinated. He starts telling lies and making excuses to Fiona, so he can spent more time with Oscar . . . and, it is hinted, Mimi. At first it seems that Oscar is the puppetmaster, but then it appears that he and Mimi may be up to a new game, with Nigel as the prize. We can't be sure, and that is one of the movie's pleasures: Somehow we know that although anything else may happen, Nigel will probably not end up with Mimi.
The word "lurid" was coined to describe films like this.
Like all stories dealing with the extremes of sex, it arrives at moments when we can barely prevent ourselves from laughing. (There is a reason for this: S&M combines humorless scenarios with absurd choreography.) It is the easiest thing in the world to walk out of a movie like "Bitter Moon" shaking our heads wearily and complaining about Polanski's bad taste, grotesque situations and fevered imagination. The purpose, of course, is to prove that we didn't fall for it: That we are much too mature, serious and well-balanced to be taken in by his juvenile fantasizing. Well, of course "Bitter Moon" is wretched excess. But Polanski directs it without compromise or apology, and it's a funny thing how critics may condescend to it, but while they're watching it you could hear a pin drop.
Full Movie on Pubfilmno1

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Leather




Rotten Tomatoes
Birch, a young man living in the Catskill Mountains, reunites with Andrew, his childhood friend from the city.


LeatherMovieSite
"It's Good To Have a Thick Skin..."
Leather is the contemporary story of a young man, Birch, who lives in the Catskill Mountains. He stays in a small cottage in a remote region with Walter, an older man and mentor who has an estranged gay son, Andrew. Birch and Walter have a friendship that involves carpentry, fishing, hunting and making items from leather. After his father dies, Andrew returns to his childhood home with his gay boyfriend from the city, Kyle, to assess Walter’s estate.  A forgotten friend from Andrew's boyhood, Birch captivates Andrew and Kyle. At first they mock Birch and his earnest, simple ways. After rigorous mountain living, they realize that Birch is wholesome, kind and benevolent. He only seeks what is right and virtuous in the complex affairs of Walter's estate, and all of their futures.

Full movie on Teramovie

Monday, December 7, 2015

DESPERATELY SEEKING SUSAN



IMDb
A bored suburban housewife, seeking adventure to her life, accidentally gets hit on the head, wakes up with amnesia, and is mistaken for a free-spirited New York City drifter named Susan.



Rotten Tomatoes
A petite New Jersey housewife finds self-fulfillment through amnesia in this new wave comedy of errors set in New York's hip '80s downtown scene. Rosanna Arquette stars as Roberta, who turns to the personals for vicarious thrills after her four-year marriage to staid hot tub salesman Gary (Mark Blum) grows stale. Her favorite classified ads trace the romance of Jim (Robert Joy), a struggling musician, and Susan (Madonna), a SoHo vamp who's just narrowly escaped being murdered alongside one of her other boyfriends -- a gangster who recently stole some Egyptian jewelry. Through a series of complicated missteps, Roberta ends up losing her memory and convincing both herself and a broodingly handsome young man named Dez (Aiden Quinn) that she's the elusive, adventurous Susan. Soon, Roberta finds herself being romanced by Dez and pursued separately by her husband, Jim, Susan, and by a murderous mobster who's looking for the stolen jewels. For her second feature outing, which was partially inspired by Jacques Rivette's Celine and Julie Go Boating, director Susan Seidelman filled her cast with hipster extras, downtown personalities, and New York thespians. Notable faces include comedian Steven Wright; future indie mainstay John Turturro; future TV stars Michael Badalucco and Laurie Metcalf; punk singer Richard Hell, who also starred in Seidelman's Smithereens; and performance artist Ann Magnunson, who would star in the director's Making Mr. Right. The big dance-club sequence was filmed at Danceteria, the disco that helped launch Madonna's career. The scene, and the film, helped propel "Into the Groove," one of the singer's all-time club classics, into the charts even though it was actually a b-side to the single "Angel." ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi


Full movie on HNTV
And Twomovies

Priest of Love




IMDb
Following the banning and burning of his novel, "The Rainbow," D.H. Lawrence and his wife, Frieda, move to the United States, and then to Mexico. When Lawrence contracts tuberculosis, they return to England for a short time, then to Italy, where Lawrence writes "Lady Chatterley's Lover."
Written by George S. Davis



RogerEbert
It's an irony, but there you are: The two best films about the life of the passionate British novelist D. H. Lawrence are based on his fiction. They are "Sons and Lovers" (1960), with Dean Stockwell playing a Nottingham miner's son (obviously based on Lawrence's memories of his own childhood), and "Women in Love" (1969), with Glenda JacksonAlan Bates and Oliver Reed in a sexual tangle that reflected Lawrence's liberating view of sexuality.
Now comes "Priest of Love," a movie based on a biography of Lawrence and some of his letters and memoirs. This is said to be a factual biography, but, of course, any screen biography is fiction -- in this case, the imaginative impressions of the filmmakers about the life of a man they never knew. In "Priest of Love," we see many of the actual places where Lawrence lived, and the homes he occupied there, but we don't learn much about the man. Certainly not as much as we could intuit from those two earlier films (and learn from his books, of course).
I believe that underlying poetic truths about people's lives are more important than the facts, anyway. It doesn't matter when you were born, but it does matter what kind of relationships you had with your fellow travelers through life. "Priest of Love" doesn't seem that interested in Lawrence's inner life, though. It's more concerned with arranging attractive photographs of the period he lived in. It gives us all the correct costumes and props and attitudes, but when it comes to what made Lawrence live and breathe, the movie falls back too easily on talk about "genius."
The great British actor Ian McKellen, fresh from his triumph in “Amadeus” on Broadway, does an interesting job of impersonating Lawrence. He looks something like him, he doesn't overact a role filled with temptations for bombast, and in the scenes where he is seen writing, we get the impression that there is thought behind his writing, and not just an actor's pushing of a pen.
But McKellen is sandbagged by a script that requires him, too, to fall back on nonsense about genius and the poet's mission. I was reminded of the story about the time publisher Bennett Cerf told James Joyce's wife, Nora, that her husband was a genius. "It's easy enough for you to say that," Nora sniffed, "as you do not have to live with the man."
The action in "Priest of Love" tends to avoid Lawrence's childhood, which was in some ways the most interesting period of his life. We see young Lawrence in misty, ill-defined flashbacks -- picture postcards about early loves and dead family. The adult Lawrence is bedeviled by censors, hounded by the British press, and splashed all over the scandal sheets after his marriage to Frieda Lawrence (the press could not forgive Lawrence for marrying the sister of the German flying ace Baron von Richthofen, or for the fact that he took her away from a husband and three children).
The Lawrences set sail for America and the art colony run in Taos, N.M., by the eccentric patroness of the arts Mabel Dodge. It is fascinating to see Ava Gardner playing Dodge; at 60, Gardner is beautiful, mysterious and just right for this role. But by then we've lost interest in the movie. It doesn't set up conflicts, only arguments, and it doesn't generate suspense, only curiosity. I have the notion that D. H. Lawrence, if he could see it, would wonder who it was about.
Just for a point Ian McKellen/Gandalf/Mr. Holmes Is Real Hung
Full movie on TubiTV

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Solaris





IMDb
A troubled psychologist is sent to investigate the crew of an isolated research station orbiting a bizarre planet.



Rotten Tomatoes
A therapist travels to a distant space station to treat a group of astronauts traumatized by mysterious entities -- and ends up having to deal with an entity of his own -- in this second film version of Stanislaw Lem's philosophical sci-fi novel. Solaris stars George Clooney as Chris Kelvin, a psychologist still mourning the loss of his wife Rheya (Natascha McElhone) when he's implored by a colleague named Gibarian (Ulrich Tukur) to investigate the increasingly weird goings-on at the Prometheus space station. By the time Kelvin gets there, Gibarian has committed suicide, leaving only the cryptic, babbling Snow (Jeremy Davies) and the paranoid, guarded Gordon (Viola Davis), both of whom are holed up in their respective rooms. As Kelvin interrogates the skeleton crew, he learns that they've had unwanted "visitors," apparitions of long-dead friends, family, and loved ones who are apparently being generated by the interstellar energy source Solaris. The doctor is dubious of their claims until one night he, too, is greeted by his wife Rheya (Natascha McElhone), whose death still torments him. At first skeptical of the new Rheya, Kelvin gradually becomes obsessed with her -- and with the guilt that he feels over their troubled marriage -- to the point where the others begin to fear for his sanity. Produced by James Cameron, Solaris represented director Steven Soderbergh's first screenplay credit since the independently financed Schizopolis in 1996. ~ Michael Hastings, Rovi


Full movie on Pubfilmno1