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Fall, The

EMAILPRINTRoadside Attractions

Fall, The reviews
64
8.3 User Score:

Generally favorable reviews

Based on 23 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?

Based on 61 votes
Read user comments
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Movie Info

Genre(s): Adventure  |  Drama  |  Fantasy

Written by: Valeri Petrov (1981 screenplay Yo Ho Ho)
Tarsem Singh
Nico Soultanakis
Dan Gilroy

Directed by: Tarsem Singh

Release Date:
Theatrical: May 9, 2008
DVD: September 9, 2008

Running Time: 117 minutes, Color

Origin: India | UK | USA

Summary

RATING: R for some violent images

Starring Lee Pace, Catinca Untaru, Justine Waddell, and Julian Bleach

Los Angeles, circa 1920s: A little immigrant girl finds herself in a hospital recovering from a fall. She strikes up a friendship with a bedridden man, who captivates her with a whimsical story that removes her far from the hospital doldrums into the exotic landscapes of her imagination. Making sure he keeps the girl interested in the story, he interweaves her family and people she likes from the hospital into his tale. (Roadside Attractions)

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

100

Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert

A movie that you might want to see for no other reason than because it exists. There will never be another like it.

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91

The Onion (A.V. Club) Tasha Robinson

It's the most glorious, wonderful mess put onscreen since Terry Gilliam's "Brazil."

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91

Seattle Post-Intelligencer Sean Axmaker

A deliciously vivid adventure fantasy.

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88

Premiere Glenn Kenny

The Fall is a movie whose every frame pulsates with the desire to be a transportive, transcendent work of cinema. And each one of said frames is full of visual bedazzlement and wonder. So full that one is loathe to sum up with the phrase "Close, but no cigar." But there is something, finally, kind of pushy about the film's desire to be a masterpiece.

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88

Philadelphia Inquirer Steven Rea

Dazzling and delirious, The Fall is a celebration of cinema, of old-fashioned storytelling and globe-hopping spectacle.

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80

Washington Post Ann Hornaday

The Fall is often an affectionate caricature itself, but one of astonishing beauty, featuring two heartfelt performances from Untaru and the tender, often mordantly funny Pace. They're perfect foils for Tarsem's gorgeous tone poem to cinema as a medium of magic and miracles, stories and lies.

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78

Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov

The Fall lives and dies on the strength of Pace and Untaru's remarkable performances. It's there that the pulsing heart of this magical-real film beats most true.

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75

San Francisco Chronicle Peter Hartlaub

It's an achingly beautiful movie and a triumph of location scouting, with more cosmopolitan spectacle than the past three Indiana Jones and James Bond movies combined.

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75

TV Guide Maitland McDonagh

Although the film revolves around a child, it's not a children's movie: A cruel and bitter undertone runs through the fanciful adventures, and Walker's depression is no mere plot contrivance to be cured by Alexandria's childish enthusiasm.

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75

USA Today Claudia Puig

The Fall is aptly named not only because it pertains to a tragic descent but because viewers will feel as if they have plunged headlong into an alternate universe with this dazzling adult fairy tale.

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70

Chicago Reader Bill Stamets

Director Tarsem (The Cell) reworks the 1981 Bulgarian film "Yo Ho Ho" for this stylish fantasy.

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67

Christian Science Monitor Peter Rainer

Some of the set pieces are ravishing, more often they're ravishingly clunky.

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63

Boston Globe Ty Burr

The Fall is what you'd get if you told a fiendishly gifted graphic illustrator the plot of "The Princess Bride" and sent him off to come up with his own version.

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60

Village Voice Nick Pinkerton

If the human details are often problematic, the IMAX-grade bombast, ceremonial camera, and Jodorowsky-esque eclecticism still combine for a singular spectacle.

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58

Portland Oregonian Shawn Levy

There's no doubt that Tarsem's a visionary director. Now he needs to envision a worthwhile script for himself.

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50

ReelViews James Berardinelli

Pretty pictures - thats what The Fall has to offer.

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50

Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips

It has a rich premise and no lack of amazements. What it lacks in any sort of dramatic shape.

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50

Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez

It's the kind of movie for which the phrase ''you've never seen anything like it before'' was invented. The question is whether anyone would want to.

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50

The Hollywood Reporter John DeFore

Tarsem and his screenwriting collaborators aren't able to come up with enough interesting justifications for their sudden shifts, and soon the shape-shifting yarn just feels like lazy storytelling.

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50

Variety Dennis Harvey

This convoluted, arbitrary, overlong whimsy will strike most grown-ups as childish, and is far too violent and pretentious for kids.

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50

New York Post Lou Lumenick

It's basically a Middle Eastern version of "The Princess Bride" with an assisted-suicide subplot.

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40

Los Angeles Times Mark Olsen

There is never a sense that The Fall exists for any reason besides simply being something nice to look at. Yet no matter how good-looking a film may be, if it's as sleep-inducing as this, there's simply no point.

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40

The New York Times Nathan Lee

A genuine labor of love -- and a real bore.

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What Our Users Said

The average user rating for this movie is 8.3 (out of 10) based on 61 User Votes

Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Joe R gave it a1:
Utterly, utterly boring. Nothing but eye candy here.

David R gave it a10:
The film is truly inspiring at first glance one would think that you were viewing a cinematic painting of Salvador Dali, vivid colour and expression of love, loss, temptation, confusion and heroic story telling at it's heart, it's all there. Tarsem Singh is definitely inspiring.

Alec C gave it a9:
Stunning cinematography. Imperfect characters, the way people are. The story progresses with steep pace, the way life is. A kaleidoscopic tour around what nature offers, what civilization created and the puny inners men still have.

Charles M gave it an8:
Superb visuals. Both the real world as well as the fantasy settings are exotic. Intimate though somewhat disjointed story. Great acting. I actually felt the fact that I could understand only half of what the little girl said added to the exotic flavor of the movie.

Dan O. gave it a10:
There's nothing I can say here that will accurately tell you how good this movie is. You really need to see it.

Sam E. gave it an8:
Epic and ambitious, visually stunning but hampered by a largely B-List cast. Worth seeing for the cinematography alone.

Shylock D. gave it a10:
A totally underrated movie. This one is a feast for the eyes and something for the heart.

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