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Crash (Full Screen Edition)
 
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Crash (Full Screen Edition) (2005)

Starring: Don Cheadle, Sandra Bullock Director: Paul Haggis Rating: Unrated Format: DVD
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1,013 customer reviews)

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  • This item: Crash (Full Screen Edition) DVD ~ Don Cheadle

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Editorial Reviews

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Movie studios, by and large, avoid controversial subjects like race the way you might avoid a hive of angry bees. So it's remarkable that Crash even got made; that it's a rich, intelligent, and moving exploration of the interlocking lives of a dozen Los Angeles residents--black, white, latino, Asian, and Persian--is downright amazing. A politically nervous district attorney (Brendan Fraser) and his high-strung wife (Sandra Bullock, biting into a welcome change of pace from Miss Congeniality) get car-jacked by an oddly sociological pair of young black men (Larenz Tate and Chris "Ludacris" Bridges); a rich black T.V. director (Terrence Howard) and his wife (Thandie Newton) get pulled over by a white racist cop (Matt Dillon) and his reluctant partner (Ryan Phillipe); a detective (Don Cheadle) and his Latina partner and lover (Jennifer Esposito) investigate a white cop who shot a black cop--these are only three of the interlocking stories that reach up and down class lines. Writer/director Paul Haggis (who wrote the screenplay for Million Dollar Baby) spins every character in unpredictable directions, refusing to let anyone sink into a stereotype. The cast--ranging from the famous names above to lesser-known but just as capable actors like Michael Pena (Buffalo Soldiers) and Loretta Devine (Woman Thou Art Loosed)--meets the strong script head-on, delivering galvanizing performances in short vignettes, brief glimpses that build with gut-wrenching force. This sort of multi-character mosaic is hard to pull off; Crash rivals such classics as Nashville and Short Cuts. A knockout. --Bret Fetzer

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Product Description

They all live in Los Angeles. And in the next 36 hours, they will collide.

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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (1,013 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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30 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Is the Academy kidding with this?, April 25, 2006
This review is from: Crash (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
Like a bad student film with big-name stars in its cast, Paul Haggis' puerile and self-important "Crash" is a masterpiece for the easily impressed. Filled with bathos and bombast, and more implausible coincidences than an 800-page novel by Charles Dickens (and no offense meant to Mr. Dickens), "Crash" plays less like a movie and more like some underachiever's dissertation for a Sociology course entitled Racism 101. (Racist white cop fondles black woman in front of her husband at routine traffic stop...pause projector...discuss what this scene shows about racism in our society...resume film...same racist white cop pulls same black woman to safety from burning wreckage...pause projector...discuss what this scene says about the possibility of redemption for every individual...etc.). Astonishingly, this piece of mealy-mouthed claptrap won the Academy Award for the Best Picture of 2005.

Cribbing its interlocking, multi-character format from "Short Cuts," "Grand Canyon," "Magnolia," "13 Conversations About One Thing" and a whole host of other similar but far superior films, Haggis' work purports to tell us that everyone - and I mean EVERYONE - living in Los Angeles is a thoroughgoing racist and bigot and, even more amazingly, spends twenty-four hours a day giving voice to their prejudice. Forget about political correctness; these people talk about race, race and nothing but race for nigh unto two hours in ways that show that Haggis is completely tone deaf when it comes to how people in the real world actually speak. This is a movie devoid of a single plausible moment (you know that verisimilitude is not high on this film's agenda when it starts snowing in Los Angeles!); it's a movie in which characters act completely without reason or motivation and in which every event that happens, no matter how idiotic or ridiculous, does so in the service of the message. On the level of dramaturgy alone, "Crash" is an unmitigated disaster and a blueprint for how not to make a movie.

Unfortunately, as "Crash" itself begins to crash and burn, an awful lot of fine people wind up getting trapped inside the wreckage. A largely talented cast is wasted on an assortment of poorly written, shallow characters, and Haggis has no idea of how to create either drama or tension in any of the scenes he shows us. The moody score by Mark Isham does its best to make it all seem powerful and important, but the sheer incompetence of the writing and directing rob the film of both those qualities. Indeed, rarely has a movie been as full of itself as "Crash" is, and rarely has a movie explored such a serious and important subject in as pretentious and superficial a manner. Perhaps the most insulting aspect of the film is how easily it bestows redemption on even its most wretched characters, as if all of life's problems could be so easily wrapped up in time for the closing credits. As others before me have pointed out, this is indeed a "feel good" movie about racism, the very last thing a movie about racism should ever be.

If you can buy a film in which an assortment of whiney, unappealing characters hurl racial invectives at one another for an hour and a half, then turn around and throw themselves into each others' arms in time for the tear-stained finale, then "Crash" may be the movie for you. But if you find yourself laughing rather than weeping through the course of the story, don't say you hadn't been warned beforehand.

What could all the fine folk in the Motion Picture Academy have been thinking?
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33 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars At best a made for TV movie, March 27, 2006
This review is from: Crash (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
Stereotypical 2-dimensional characters; unbelievable plot line; left me totally cold after I saw it. I forgot it 5 minutes after the movie was over and never even talked about it with friends. It did not touch me or move me at all like BrokeBack Mountain and Capote did. Can't believe it won best picture over the other 4 nominated movies. Walk the Line wasn't even nominated and Crash ended up on many critic's 10 worst movies list. What a joke. I think every unemployed actor and actress in Hollywood was in this movie and that's why it won. The American public and the Academy knows it made an embarrassing mistake naming this the best picture.
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32 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars BEST PICTURE?, March 20, 2006
By R. Penola (NYC, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Crash (Widescreen Edition) (DVD)
CRASH has its absorbing sequences, and as many reviewers have mentioned, it has more than passing resemblance to MAGNOLIA, which is superior in every way. The subject of race in today's America is certainly a noble subject to bring to life in a movie - the issue with this film is that it is didactic, completely predictable and way too clever to be even remotely believable. Each performer is given two specific qualities- their racist self and their human self. And just like a nifty puzzle, all of these sides come together in a rather absurd stew by the time we get to the "revelations" sequence at the end. The musical score and cinemtography are so purposely dramatic and harsh that they end up becoming overbearing. How on Earth did this forgettable, uninvolving movie EVER win Best Picture?
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Crash is Indie? Give me a break.
I just noticed a sale on Amazon.com: "Up to 40% off Indie titles." Most of the movies measure up the Indie classification - or at least as far as I understand the term. Read more
Published 6 days ago by A. Marsh

1.0 out of 5 stars Crash Landing
Having introduced myself to Haggis's work via, 'The Valley of Elah', I was encouraged to visit his back catalogue. Read more
Published 17 days ago by Rodney J. Moss

5.0 out of 5 stars Uncle Nobody Gives it a High 5(stars)
Crash remains one of the most unforgetable movies ever.Did it deserve the Oscar? Indeed!! How many movies made you immediately think"everyone should see this"? Read more
Published 24 days ago by Daniel J. Malone

5.0 out of 5 stars Provocative psychological drama
Before seeing 2005's "Crash" I had, of course, heard the usual criticisms -- it's too contrived, unrealistic, depressing, heavy-handed, preachy, too much cussing, blah, blah,... Read more
Published 1 month ago by ! Durrkk

1.0 out of 5 stars Re-defining and expanding on the meaning of "heavy-handed"
This didn't look all that good to me when it came out; it looked like a just-as-obvious only more-black updating of Lawrence Kasdan's GRAND CANYON and that seemed unlikely to be... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Muzzlehatch

4.0 out of 5 stars very good--but just not quite enough to be a masterpiece
Crash paints a portrait of how difficult it can be for different groups of people to get along with each other. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Matthew G. Sherwin

1.0 out of 5 stars Crash - great story, lousy blu ray
The story line of Crash is fantastic and the acting is very good. It takes several viewings to get the intricacies of the story and well worth the repitition. Read more
Published 3 months ago by der_dicht

5.0 out of 5 stars Crash
This is a good movie about different racial backgrounds and how some of them came together at the end. It has mini stories that all come together at the end. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Simon M. Lam

1.0 out of 5 stars more liberal propaganda from liberal holloywood
put crash in your dvd player , sit back and get ready for a white guilt trip from our friends in liberal hollywood. Read more
Published 3 months ago by I. wilson

5.0 out of 5 stars superb in every way; story line, acting, production
I didn't intend to watch this, as i don't like holywood movies in general. A friend brought over a copy she got from the library. Read more
Published 4 months ago by P. F. Soto

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