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Crash (2004/I)
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Overview
Tagline:
You think you know who you are. You have no idea. morePlot:
Several stories interweave during two days in Los Angeles involving a collection of inter-related characters... more | full synopsisAwards:
Won 3 Oscars. Another 38 wins & 66 nominations moreNewsDesk:
(85 articles)
Howard Dismisses Marriage Rumours (From WENN. 20 August 2008, 6:29 PM, PDT)
Bobby Moresco to pen Charlie Luciano flick (From screeninglog. 14 August 2008, 6:45 PM, PDT)
User Comments:
Roller-coaster of emotions moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Karina Arroyave | ... | Elizabeth | |
| Dato Bakhtadze | ... | Lucien | |
| Sandra Bullock | ... | Jean Cabot | |
| Don Cheadle | ... | Det. Graham Waters | |
| Art Chudabala | ... | Ken Ho | |
| Sean Cory | ... | Motorcycle Cop | |
| Tony Danza | ... | Fred | |
| Keith David | ... | Lt. Dixon | |
| Loretta Devine | ... | Shaniqua Johnson | |
| Matt Dillon | ... | Officer John Ryan | |
| Jennifer Esposito | ... | Ria | |
| Ime Etuk | ... | Georgie (as Ime N. Etuk) | |
| Eddie J. Fernandez | ... | Officer Gomez (as Eddie Fernandez) | |
| William Fichtner | ... | Flanagan | |
| Howard Fong | ... | Store Owner |
Additional Details
MPAA:
Rated R for language, sexual content and some violence.Parents Guide:
View content advisory for parentsRuntime:
112 min | 115 min (director's cut)Color:
ColorAspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 moreSound Mix:
Dolby DigitalCertification:
Netherlands:12 | Sweden:7 | India:A | Belgium:KT | Argentina:16 | Switzerland:14 (canton of Vaud) | South Korea:15 | USA:Unrated (director's cut) | New Zealand:R16 | Malaysia:U (DVD) | Japan:PG-12 | Malaysia:(Banned) (theatrical) | Taiwan:R-12 | Brazil:14 | France:U | Ireland:15 (DVD rating) | USA:R (certificate #40991) | Switzerland:14 (canton of Geneva) | Hong Kong:IIB | Iceland:16 | Chile:TE | Australia:MA | Canada:13+ (Quebec) | Canada:14A (British Columbia) | Canada:14A (Ontario) | UK:15 | Finland:K-11 | Ireland:15A | Singapore:M18 | Germany:12 | Portugal:M/12 | Norway:15 | Philippines:R-13MOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
The only Best Picture winner initially released before the previous year's Best Picture. 2005 Best Picture (Million Dollar Baby (2004)) release date: 15 December 2004. 2006 Best Picture (Crash) release date: 10 September 2004 moreGoofs:
Revealing mistakes: When Officer Ryan is helping his Dad in the bathroom, he pulls down his Dad's underwear but when Dad sits on the toilet he is still wearing his underwear, [you can see the elastic band]. moreQuotes:
[first lines]Graham: It's the sense of touch. In any real city, you walk, you know? You brush past people, people bump into you. In L.A., nobody touches you. We're always behind this metal and glass. I think we miss that touch so much, that we crash into each other, just so we can feel something.
more
Soundtrack:
Problems moreFAQ
How much sex, violence, and profanity are in this movie?A NOTE REGARDING SPOILERS
Is this movie based on a novel?
more
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Like Altman's classic Short Cuts, and Anderson's Magnolia, Crash, by writer/director Paul Haggis weaves a tale of multiple characters through the web of streets we have come to know as Los Angeles. Unlike those other two films this one has a very specific theme to explore. From the opening line uttered by Don Cheadle we know this is to be a film about how people relate, and from the interchange that follows between Jennifer Esposito and Alexis Rhee (pretty sure she plays the Korean female driver who rear-ended her) how people relate tends to be ruled by first impressions or prejudice.
Race is paramount in this film, and all our preconceptions of who people are get twisted and turned through the intricate plot. With each new additional character we find another assumption, another stereotype, and then watch as that preconception is obliterated as the character develops. It is a credit to the deftly written script, tight direction and exceptional acting talent that every one of these many characters is fully realized on screen without ever feeling one-dimensional.
I would love to discuss some of the details of what happens to explain how well it is done, but part of the magic of this film is allowing yourself to be taken on this ride. Mind you, this isn't a ride of pleasure. The first half of this film is unrelentingly in its ferociousness. I could literally feel my rage at some of the characters forming to a fever pitch. The fear and hatred I was confronting wasn't just on the screen, but in the pit of my stomach. And in one absolutely brilliant moment I was literally sobbing at the expectation of horror unfolding, only to be cathartically released in a most unexpected way.
Mr. Haggis was in attendance at the screening I saw and explained that the idea for this film came to him one night sometime after 9/11 at about 2a.m. when his own memories of a car- jacking experience from 10 years before wouldn't leave him alone. Clearly this film was his way of relieving those demons of memory, using the catharsis of his art to unleash them and in doing so has given to all viewers of cinema an opportunity to examine our own preconceptions about race relations and how we treat each other and think of ourselves. He mentioned in the discussion after-wards that he likes to make films that force people to confront difficult issues. Films that ask people to think after the film has ended and not just leave saying: "that was a nice film".
This isn't a "nice" film, and I would expect that it will provoke many a discussion in the ensuing weeks when it opens nation-wide. It's a discussion long overdue for this country, and it took a Canadian to bring the issue to the fore in this brilliant, thought provoking film.