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Before Night Falls
Before Night Falls
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List Price: $14.98
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Product Details

  • Starring: Javier Bardem, Olivier Martinez, Andrea Di Stefano, Johnny Depp, Michael Wincott
  • Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Binding: VHS Tape
  • Director: Julian Schnabel
  • EAN: 0794043533730
  • Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Original recording reissued, NTSC
  • Label: New Line Home Video
  • Manufacturer: New Line Home Video
  • Number of Items: 1
  • Product Group: Video
  • Publisher: New Line Home Video
  • Release Date: 2001-10-02
  • Studio: New Line Home Video
  • Theatrical Release Date: 2001-01-26
  • Title: Before Night Falls
  • UPC: 794043533730
Avg Customer Rating: 4 stars

Product Description: Based on the posthumously published memoir by Cuban poet Reinaldo Arenas, Before Night Falls is artist-director Julian Schnabel's second exercise in artist biography, but where Schnabel's earlier film Basquiat was relatively conventional, this film is bolder in both style and execution. Schnabel is perhaps too enamored of his subject as a noble martyr, lending the film a somewhat inflated sense of importance. Still, it's rare to see an artist's life and work so elegantly interwoven, and Before Night Falls uses all of Arenas's life as its canvas, from impoverished youth to lively gay freedom in mid-1950's Cuba; imprisonment during Castro's antigay regime; and to New York City in 1980, followed by Arenas's battle with AIDS and subsequent suicide (depicted here as assisted) in 1990.

Through these extreme rises and falls, Arenas is always writing, his typewriter his most faithful lover and weapon (by way of smuggled manuscripts) against the dark forces that surround him. As Time magazine's Richard Corliss wrote, Arenas is "a serious actor's dream role: to be a gay Jesus in a modern Passion Play," and Javier Bardem--the first Spanish actor to receive an Oscar nomination--inhabits the role with subtle ferocity, charting this emotional odyssey with outer reserve but blazing infernos of internal passion. And while Schnabel suffers from a hyperactive camera, there's poetry here--visual, dramatic, and literal--and vibrant humor to temper the deep tragedy of Arenas's life. Schnabel also uses his actor friends to good advantage: a nearly unrecognizable Sean Penn adds an ironic touch to his brief appearance as a peasant, and Johnny Depp is both funny and fearsome in dual roles as a drag queen and vicious army interrogator. --Jeff Shannon


Customer Reviews


4 stars Bardem's masterclass performance helps reign in the incoherencies...
I admit to knowing nothing about poet Reinaldo Arenas before sitting down to watch `Before Night Falls'. In fact, the only reason I had decided to give this a try in the first place was all the hype heaped upon Bardem's Oscar nominated performance. At the time of my first viewing I was less than impressed. Sure, it was a decent movie and I was wholly blown away by Bardem's heartbreaking performance, but in the end it just was not my cup of tea. Recently I decided to revisit this film and upon a second viewing I must say that, while it still has it's detractors, it comes off very sincere and heartfelt; as if it meant something to everyone involved, and that feeling transcends the screen.

`Before Night Falls' is adapted from Arenas memoir of the same name. The film covers his life from birth till death (euthanasia) with an emotional pull that a lot of biopic's lack. You can tell that director Julian Schnabel is longing to do justice to this man he obviously admires. This emotional resonance can be attributed in large part to Bardem. Javier Bardem (who recently was able to tag `Academy Award Winner' to his name) has always been an intriguing actor, one that slips into his roles and draws the audience in. Of all his work (that I have seen, for I haven't seen everything) this is his finest performance. He truly burrows beneath Arenas and causes his entire being to fester at the surface, uncovering the man he really was.

This is of the utmost importance, because `Before Night Falls' biggest flaw is the fact that it's construction is rather choppy and incoherent, enough to really dampen ones grasp of their surroundings, and ultimately who Arenas was. If Bardem had faltered in his performance in any way then the film could have possibly been lost to the audience. This is possibly where Schnabel's admiration for his subject jeopardizes his tribute, for he tries so hard to show us everything that he doesn't take the time to flesh it all out for us.

For instance; I had no idea that Arenas was suffering from AIDS. Maybe I missed something, but as far as I could tell that was never clarified. I had to look up Reinaldo Arenas on the internet to finally understand the last few minutes of the film. I could have missed it, but that is just a small example of the bigger picture.

Reinaldo Arenas lived a very interesting (albeit emotionally devastating) life. The film follows it all; from his growing up in Cuba in poverty to being imprisoned during Castro's regime (his alternative lifestyle played a big factor there) to his exile to New York City before his death in 1990. During his entire lifespan he was always writing. He started at a young age writing poems (which infuriated his father) and moved onto writing material that garnered him many loyal followers to offset the many enemies. All of this is displayed for us on the screen, but Schnabel doesn't take enough time to really embellish and help us to comprehend all that is going on. This is one of those times when a film, although long, is not quite long enough. Many have commented about it being too slow and meandering, but I think that if Schnabel had expanded his film thirty to forty minutes he could have given us a more coherent depiction of Arenas life, and that would have actually picked up the pace for we wouldn't be left confused.

I can't for the life of me decide if this is due to O'Keefe and Carriles screenplay or Schnabel's direction; possibly both.

Beyond the confusion though, lies one of the richest and most fulfilling performances I've seen in a long time, and one of the most endearing biographical performances maybe ever. Bardem sinks so far into Arenas yet never gets lost in the films waves. He actually works to steady those waves and draws out this mans life amidst the confusion. He paints Arenas clearly, vividly and enjoyably. We want to know him, we want to watch him, we want to cry for him. Bardem is aided by a slew of supporting actors, from Olivier Martinez (who turns out possibly his finest performance to date) to Sean Penn and Johnny Depp who prove that no part is too small to make an impact. In the end though, this film belongs to Bardem, and without him it would lose everything that makes it work.


4 stars Fighting for Freedom
Powerful screenplay based on the autobiography of the exiled Cuban author, Reinaldo Arenas.

Arenas was a gay Cuban author and poet who was persecuted by the Castro regime and fled Cuba in 1980 (the Mariel Boat-lift) and ended up in New York City, where he continued to write and rail against the Communists. In 1990, stricken with AIDS and without health insurance, he committed suicide with drugs and alcohol. It's a painful and heart-wrenching story, but the acting is superb and there are moments of true mirth along with those of care and tenderness. Javier Bardem is fabulous playing Arenas in this movie!
Recommended!


5 stars An excellent film about Cuba under Fidel and his oppression of intellectuals
This film gives the viewer an insight into Castro's take over of Cuba. The acting is superb. It is a look into the life of a gay cuban writer from birth to death and his stuggle as an artist in a society where free thought and speech are forbidden. The film also shows the suffering of a homosexual as an outcast in that society. Gives the viewer an insight into human rights issues in Cuba after the revolution and a "big brother" regime is instituted. The cameo's by Johnny Depp and Sean Penn are amazing.


5 stars Thank you
Thank you for sendin g this movie so fast. It was a great movie and Johnny Depp looks good as a blonde woman.


5 stars revolution eating its own children, best since Gulag Archipelago.
This is a great film, that brings home the horror of totalitarianism - and its very human toll - from a unique perspective: suppressed gays and secondarily writers. I was utterly riveted by this, from the emergence of talent to the spiritual destruction of a human being. This is as good as Solzynitzen.

The acting is simply a marvel, beyond the star, especially Depp: he plays two (at least that I noticed) sexually ambivalent characters in the film, with complete, mesmerizing total concentration. Bardem is an absolutely first-rate talent, and this is the first film I've seen him in.

Warmly recommended. This is a dark side of the 20C that we would be foolish to forget.