Confessions of a Dangerous Mind |  | Director: George Clooney Actors: Sam Rockwell, Drew Barrymore, Dick Clark, Michelle Sweeney, Chelsea Ceci Studio: Miramax Films Category: DVD
List Price: $9.99 Buy Used: $1.12 as of 3/22/2010 06:22 EDT details You Save: $8.87 (89%)
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Seller: whatsinthehouse Rating: 118 reviews Sales Rank: 9152
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC Language: English (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 113 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: 786936220933 UPC: 786936220933 EAN: 0786936220933 ASIN: B00008XERA
Theatrical Release Date: January 24, 2003 Release Date: September 9, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description AN ADAPTATION OF THE CULT MEMOIR OF GAME SHOW IMPRESSARIO CHUCK BARRIS, IN WHICH HE PURPORTS TO HAVE BEEN A CIA HITMAN.
Amazon.com The memoirs of game-show creator-host Chuck Barris (the man responsible for The Newlywed Game and The Gong Show) are the inspiration for this sneaky biopic, which not only covers Barris's television career, but also his exploits--unsubstantiated, but also not disproved--as a government assassin. As Barris, Sam Rockwell gives a gutsy, manic-depressive, warts-and-all performance, depicting how Barris cheated repeatedly on his longtime girlfriend Penny (Drew Barrymore), was recruited into the CIA by a stone-faced agent (George Clooney, who also makes a stylish directorial debut), created some of the most popular yet reviled TV shows of the 1970s and '80s, and had a torrid affair with a mysterious, beautiful operative (Julia Roberts). For a screenplay by Charlie Kaufman (Being John Malkovich, Adaptation), Confessions of a Dangerous Mind is pretty straightforward, letting Barris's fevered brain speak for itself. The result manages to be lurid, comic, and oddly philosophical. --Bret Fetzer
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 118
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind March 3, 2010 Arnita D. Brown (USA) This movie covers the life of the TV iconoclast in his own words, from his 1940s childhood through his Hollywood success and subsequent downfall. The kicker here is Barris's claim that throughout his entire career he moonlighted as a CIA assassin. As a result, Confessions plays out as half biographical drama and half spy thriller, also tracking the purported killer from initial recruitment to lethal climax. Berry tells an incredible story, and this movie actually made me interested in this quasi-celebrity's life. He's certainly an intriguing man, and the way this movie is put together is very good. A tribute to of one of television's dark geniuses.
excellent November 14, 2009 William R. Nicholas (Mahwah, NJ USA) Chuck Barris says in his book of this name that, while creating the Dating Game and hosting the Gong Show in the 1960s and 1970s, he was also a CIA assasin. He ran around Europe, his story goes, killing commie agents, going from East to West Berlin, playing all kinds of nasty games that would make Suzie the 1969 prom queen blush.
This is what Confessions Of A Dangerous Mind is about, and George Cloney directed this, using Sam Rockwell to play Barris.
What makes the movie work is that it dramatizes tells Barris' story as if it were true. The film does not concern itself about what is real and what is fiction. By showing it as Barris tells it, it becomes plauseable.
And Cloney directs as an artist preforming a labor of love, not a star who "now gets behind the camara." His choice of Sam Rockwell, a brilliant charactor actor, is a brilliant move. By not chosing a big name, Cloney let's you focus on the story and not on the star playing Barris. He also makes great choices, such as grounding this firmly in time and place. It is not an action moive, but smart film for smart people interested in a very specific era and mileu.
Rockwell really does not look like Barris, but plays himself in the situations Barris describes, and this allows the story to drive the film. Rockwell is a Barris we can buy because he tells the tale so well.
Cloney, Julia Robert's and Drew Barrymoore are also here, but just happen to be big name actors in a great little project. If any of the three wanted a star vehicle, this is not it. But that is great; keeping Confessions Of A Dangerous Mind a small film only adds to the mistique.
If you belive it, it is amazing. If you can't, so what: it is still a great story.
As far as A I am concerned, Chuck Barris the spy killer, why that is the stupidist, most redicu.............well?
nice pace October 30, 2009 Strawberry This is a solid story
paced well and Rockwell is extremely watchable
Rutger H. awesome too as is clooney --direction solid as well
Very entertaining May 16, 2009 Jason How much of this movie is true is debatable, but it doesn't really matter because it moves at a fast clip and keeps your interest the entire time. This movie really brought Sam Rockwell to my attention as an actor who can carry and entire movie on his shoulders.
If you like 70's nostalgia, tv game shows, clock and dagger spies, lots of movie stars and good acting, you'll probably enjoy this movie.
Watch the movie before reading the book! January 12, 2009 Mel Zorro 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The movie itself is well-acted & fun to watch, but if you've read the book you feel like they left out/changed the most engaging plot points.
Sam Rockwell does a great job as Chuck Barris and Drew Barrymore is a sweet, pathetic Penny Pachino which makes the love story of the film work on a basic level. Unfortunately the espionage elements which made up the majority of the book are glossed over in favor of artistic fluff.
Barris' friendship with Jim Byrd is cut away to merely boss and employee, while Patricia's eventual fate is meaningless b/c she is shown as a brief sexual fling with no susbtance. It's too bad they wasted Julia Roberts in this part, that was the best part of the book.
I would suggest reading the book over viewing the film, but it still has its entertaining moments.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 118
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