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Chain (2004)

Chain (2004)

GENRESDrama
LANGEnglish
ACTOR
Miho NikaidoMira BillotteTarik O'ReganRick Aquino
DIRECTOR
Jem Cohen

SYNOPSICS

Chain (2004) is a English movie. Jem Cohen has directed this movie. Miho Nikaido,Mira Billotte,Tarik O'Regan,Rick Aquino are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2004. Chain (2004) is considered one of the best Drama movie in India and around the world.

As regional character disappears and corporate culture homogenizes our surroundings, it's increasingly hard to tell where you are. Actual malls, theme parks, hotels and corporate centers worldwide are joined into one "superlandscape" which shapes the lives of two women caught within it. One is a corporate executive, the other a young drifter.

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Chain (2004) Reviews

  • visually breathtaking

    apersonhumming-12004-09-08

    I saw a rough cut of this at the Portland Experimental Film Festival, and while largely unedited, the footage I saw was some of the more honest and moving I've seen all year. While revolving around a fictional narrative, the film was shot in real locations(all of them large shopping multiplexes), and I was amazed to find out that while the filming took place in multiple countries, the common mall has become so homogenized that I could barely tell one place from another. The characters are believable, and it took me a while to figure out that it wasn't a straightforward documentary. This is a meditative, mature opus from Jem Cohen, in line with his earlier work Lost Book Found, where truth and fiction blend to compliment the overarching idea, which he stated at the screening he drew largely from ideas inspired by Walter Benjamin's "The Arcades Project." Beautiful stuff.

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  • Beauty in the Mundane

    cshap20012005-02-03

    In a chain, one element leads to another which leads to another and there is little change from one element to the next. It is this idea that Chain portrays well. With shots of shopping malls, highways, and office parks from around the country, Chain shows how uniform American culture has become with the help of corporations. What it perhaps does better, is show beauty in the mundane. Chain is filled with scenes presenting simple beauty of breeze through a construction site, contrasting colors of parking lots at dusk, reflections in the glass of office buildings, and the graphic beauty in a confluence of stairways. The story in Chain is subtle. Two different women tell in a sometimes diary, sometimes inner voice, their personal takes on the sameness of place to place and the desires to want what you don't have. The story is almost too subtle at times, however, with the audience wishing that it would have lead to a stronger point.

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  • Chain

    efeedor12006-04-06

    Jem Cohen's Chain is an interesting conceit; like the Christopher Guest films, it pretends to be a documentary, but unlike those blatantly fraudulent comedies, you do not know Chain is fiction until the ending credits and even then, you do not know to what extent. The "plot," of which there is not much, involves the supposedly parallel lives of two women, a homeless and jobless teenage runaway named Amanda (Mira Billotte) who lives in a mall in the environs of Albany, New York, and Tamiko (Miho Nikaido), a middle-class (?) Japanese-American businesswoman whose entire existence seems to be devoted to an unnamed company that doesn't seem to repay Tamiko with the same devotion. The film cuts back and fourth between interviews of the two, who never meet nor intersect in any way. Both seem to be zombies of "the system" and offer up lengthy, dry, uninteresting anecdotes spoken almost entirely in monotone. You see them speak while "interviewed" sometimes (especially with Amanda, who films herself in a night vision video-letter that's meant for her estranged half-sister with a digital camera Amanda's found), but clips of their environments are usually imposed over the audio. These clips, filmed by Mr. Cohen on an old Bolex camera are often very beautiful compositions, but that is not always the case. (And I'm not speaking exclusively of the shots of decrepit buildings and the seedy, impoverished, abandoned parts of town; many of those are both well composed and effective.) Unfortunately, the images are better suited for photographs that you can look on for as long as you personally desire than for a feature-length film which makes you a captive of the theater for ninety-nine minutes. It is important to note that the slowness is entirely intentional; Mr. Cohen said specifically that he intended not for his film to be boring, but to be "frustrating." This is good technique; frustrating is what the lives of the two characters are: frustrating, dull and inescapable, though they themselves are neither fully capable of knowing it nor fleeing from it. The characters, to me, represented the poor souls you see ambling aimlessly through the bad sections of town; the people "we" never pay attention to, the people we try not to look at. Unfortunately, Chain almost seems to justify our unwillingness to look at them. These wanderers are dullards without an interesting word to say. I acknowledge that Mr. Cohen did not intend for us to develop feelings for the characters just as much as he did intend for the film to be frustrating to watch. I guess the movie's point is that it's no fun to be in Amanda or Tamiko's shoes, but maybe if Mr. Cohen showed that people trapped in the system are still people, I'd have been more receptive to their plight. (Even if these characters aren't meant to be likable as such, I doubt we were supposed to think ill of or condemn them.) But maybe that these people have lost their humanity is his point and Chain is just a misanthropic movie. I appreciate Mr. Cohen's experiment, but if a viewer goes into the movie not knowing that Chain is not a documentary and is so enervated by it's boringness that they slip away before the credits roll, they'd have no idea that the movie was an experiment at all, and that is the film's most interesting element. Even after watching the credits and being full knowledgeable that Mr. Cohen was known for blending reality with fiction in his films, I wouldn't have fully understood that the film was entirely fiction until he, who was at the screening in person, discussed it. It is a credit to his ability as a realistic writer that he can have us so well fooled, but a detriment to his skills as a director that he has no interest in stimulating the audience.

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  • Contemplative film about lonely lives in urban landscapes, worldwide.

    GunnerRunner2006-02-07

    Though I watched this film only on TV, I was easily hypnotized by its beautiful pictures, its timing, and its sound. It's like a James Benning film with people in it. The film doesn't hurry you to get familiar with its two female characters and to take part in their lives. It might feel boring. But it might also feel just like your own situation or that of your friends. Modern society and its spaces, especially the urban landscapes (that look the same in each part of the world, we learn) are dissected and so reveal their lack of individual features that could people to identify with their habitat. You can use the time that the film gives you to become aware of this, and then go out and change your life to something meaningful. Which also might mean, that you have to leave before the film ends. In the credits you learn that everything was staged. Does it make a difference? Nope. I liked it very much.

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  • a few words about the film

    vbaish2005-10-17

    jem cohen's fictional thing, not really a film in the expected sense since we get the moving images but not the hook and drag of narrative and not the blaat blaat splotchiness of non-narrative film.i have a fondness for his particularly aestheic, sentimental almost, because it seems so familiar to my own teenage experiences (abandoned malls, house perpetually being build in a row while old houses on the main street crumbled into disrepair. ugly disrepair.) and it is not often made, this kind of looking film, probably because it is not pleasantly ugly. i admired that he showed, without prejudice, both sides of that consumer impulse-the person who ends up working as a small piece of the huge need to make and to buy, and the person who is driven to help create the organism that houses the need. it was appropriate that the main characters are women, since women do most of the buying and, though i cannot substantiate this just this second, most of the small, poorly paid jobs. he did a good job of presenting the dialectic of materialism as it is now and a lovely job showing the images of con- and destruction we see all the time but rarely stop to look at. but what i like best about walter benjamin, who cohen thanks in the credits of the film, is that his own warmth and humanity occasionally mixes with the subjects about which he is so obviously ambivalent. while i believed the characters in chain, i didn't care for them. if jem cohen can make the kind of film which also makes me care about the people, he will be one of the few extraordinary geniuses among people.

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