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Donnie Darko [Blu-ray] [2001] [US Import]

Jake Gyllenhaal , Jena Malone , Richard Kelly    Blu-ray
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (331 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Jake Gyllenhaal, Jena Malone, Mary McDonnell, Holmes Osborne, Maggie Gyllenhaal
  • Directors: Richard Kelly
  • Writers: Richard Kelly
  • Producers: Aaron Ryder, Adam Fields, Casey La Scala, Christopher Ball, Drew Barrymore
  • Format: AC-3, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Subtitled, Widescreen
  • Language: English, French
  • Subtitles: English, Spanish
  • Region: Region A/1 (Read more about DVD/Blu-ray formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 2.35:1
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Classification: R (Restricted) (US MPAA rating. See details.)
  • Studio: 20th Century Fox
  • DVD Release Date: 10 Feb 2009
  • Run Time: 113 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (331 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B001JNNDBA
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 166,693 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

From Amazon.co.uk

Donnie Darko is a thought-provoking, touching and distinctive offering from relative newcomer, Richard Kelly (II). It's 1988 in small-town America and Donnie, a disturbed teenager on medication and undergoing psychoanalysis for his blackouts and personality disorders, is being visited by a being in a rabbit suit whom he calls Frank. It's this anti-Harvey that saves Donnie from being crushed to death when an airplane engine falls from the sky onto his house. This is the beginning of their escalating relationship, which, as Donnie follows Frank's instructions, becomes increasingly violent and destructive. Added to this is Frank's warning of the impending apocalypse and Donnie's realisation that he can manipulate time, leading to a startling denouement where nearly everything becomes clear.

"Nearly everything", because Donnie Darko is a darkly comic, surreal journey in which themes of space, time and morality are interwoven with a classic coming-of-age story of a teenage boy's struggle to understand the world around him. The film leaves the viewer with more questions than it answers, but then that's part of its charm. Performances are superb: Jake Gyllenhaal underplays the mixed-up kid role superbly and Donnie's episodes of angst positively erupt out of the screen. There are also some starry cameos from Mary McDonnell as Donnie's long-suffering mother, Patrick Swayze as Jim Cunningham, the personal-development guru with a terrible secret, and Noah Wyle and Drew Barrymore as Donnie's progressive teachers. Undoubtedly too abstruse for some tastes, Donnie Darko's balance of outstanding performances with intelligent dialogue and a highly inventive story will reward those looking for something more highbrow than the average teenage romp. --Kristen Bowditch

Review

Donnie Darko is a thought-provoking, touching and distinctive offering from relative newcomer, Richard Kelly (II). It's 1988 in small-town America and Donnie, a disturbed teenager on medication and undergoing psychoanalysis for his blackouts and personality disorders, is being visited by a being in a rabbit suit whom he calls Frank. It's this anti-Harvey that saves Donnie from being crushed to death when an airplane engine falls from the sky onto his house. This is the beginning of their escalating relationship, which, as Donnie follows Frank's instructions, becomes increasingly violent and destructive. Added to this is Frank's warning of the impending apocalypse and Donnie's realisation that he can manipulate time, leading to a startling denouement where nearly everything becomes clear. "Nearly everything", because Donnie Darko is a darkly comic, surreal journey in which themes of space, time and morality are interwoven with a classic coming-of-age story of a teenage boy's struggle to understand the world around him. The film leaves the viewer with more questions than it answers, but then that's part of its charm. Performances are superb: Jake Gyllenhaal underplays the mixed-up kid role superbly and Donnie's episodes of angst positively erupt out of the screen. There are also some starry cameos from Mary McDonnell as Donnie's long-suffering mother, Patrick Swayze as Jim Cunningham, the personal-development guru with a terrible secret, and Noah Wyle and Drew Barrymore as Donnie's progressive teachers. Undoubtedly too abstruse for some tastes, Donnie Darko's balance of outstanding performances with intelligent dialogue and a highly inventive story will reward those looking for something more highbrow than the average teenage romp. -- --Kristen Bowditch

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Donnie Darko 11 Feb 2003
By A. Kyle
Format:DVD
A brilliantly bizzare film that will leave you in a state of shock while you try to get your head around what just happened. It will challenge your perceptions of your own reality and provide a talking point aswell. The appearance of Frank, a six foot tall time travelling talking rabbit who foretells the end of the world within five minutes of the start sets the tone and is followed up without dissapointment.

With many surreal moments, being set in the 80s it can only be expected, and a complimentary soundtrack the film can be enjoyed by many people on different levels whether for the nostalgia, weirdness, relationships or complicated theories of space/time travel and mental health.

Not a film for the lowest common denominator but one which is definately worth an investigation.

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91 of 99 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars I Think We�ve All Seen Bonanza!!! ***** 3 Mar 2003
By Mr. N. Carnegie HALL OF FAME VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD
Donnie Darko is a very difficult movie to characterise and assign to one or even two genres, which is also part of its appeal and fascination. It opens with the title character (Jake Gyllenhall) waking in his pyjamas, with his bike lying next to him, on a highway overlooking his hometown of Middlesex, set in an idyllic tree covered valley. Straightening up he looks out toward the rising sun on the horizon and with a knowing smile he re-mounts his bicycle and makes his way back home to the tune of Echo and The Bunnymen's 'The Killing Moon' in what is an excellent opening sequence. Right from these first few frames it was obvious that I was about to witness something very original and it had me hooked.

Donnie Darko is inspired (I would guess) by the weird combination of Philip K Dick, Wes Anderson, JD Salinger and the classic James Stewart movie 'Harvey'. It announces the arrival of two great new talents in Writer/Director Richard Kelly and the young actor Jake Gyllenhall, in what is a hugely original, ingenious and entertaining movie. Set in 1988, around Halloween time, this movie has the conventional leafy-suburbia-plus-high-school setting, which alludes to the horror genre of Carrie and Halloween but it is no horror movie. It also has specific elements that suggest that it's a psychodrama about a young man with schizophrenia but this is not 'A Beautiful Mind'. It also ponders the possibility of time travel but this is not science fiction. Stranger still, Donnie Darko is unusual in that (unlike most retro 1980's pictures such as The Wedding Singer) it actually has a very cool soundtrack drawn from the period of my youth, which includes contributions from the likes of Echo and The Bunnymen, Tears For Fears and Joy Division.

So, what is Donnie Darko about?...

Much of this movie is darkly comic and there are some great scenes including a conversation between Donnie and his therapist, where she asks him what he thinks about at school. Like most teenage boys he inevitably replies "having s*x" before proceeding to unbutton his trousers about to m*sturbate. There is also a scene where at a PTA meeting Donnie's mother challenges the local bigot by asking "Do you even know who Graham Greene is?" she confidently and proudly replies "Oh please! I think we've all seen Bonanza".

Personally I loved this movie but whether or not you enjoy this movie probably depends upon how far left of centre you like your movies. If you are not a fan of independent cinema or movies by the likes of Wes Anderson and David Lynch then you probably wont like this. However there is much to recommend in Donnie Darko, not least the cast, which includes, Noah Wyle (ER), Mary McDonnell (Dances With Wolves), Maggie Gyllenhaal (Confessions of A Dangerous Mind) and the previously mentioned Patrick Swayze, Drew Barrymore and Katherine Ross. Jake Gyllenhaal's exquisite comic timing and laidback personality endows Donnie's existence with a dreamlike quality at odds with his teen angst and the suburban paranoia of his surroundings. Meanwhile writer/director Richard Kelly creates a wonderful sense of tension and keeps you guessing throughout the movie that even after the final titles have rolled you are still left to mull over what you have just witnessed.

Whilst critics may argue that Donnie Darko fails as a psychological study and/or horror movie, you cant help but feel they are missing the point, as it deliberately avoids easy classification to a specific genre and instead concentrates on being intelligent, ingenious and highly original. Closing appropriately to a cover version of the old Tears For Fears song 'Mad World' and the lyrics "the dreams on which I'm dying are the best I've ever had", neatly ties up the previous two hours and what was for me a very satisfactory cinematic experience. Destined for cult status this undoubtedly deserves five stars! Read more ›

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars donnie darko - dierctors cut 6 April 2005
Format:DVD
FANTISTIC - the greatest film of the last few years. In the midst of our specail effects/blockbuster storm through present day cinema, orgnaillty and acting has won over so many hearts and imgnations.

i dont think there will ever be a full agreement on what this film is about, not even between those who made it. but that is what makes this film magical, its a film for the indivdual.

and now with the superb dierectors cut we are provided with two versions of a film to be accesabile to a wider audience.

the theatrical cut is the most confusing, the most unsettling? it is the one where you are given the chance to make your own mind up.

this new dierctors cut is our chance to have a privleged view in seeing how the dierctor views his film, what he thinks it is all about. This one (still after a view viewings!)makes more sense, this cut bumps up the science fiction element that is a part of this piece of artwork.

the new soundtrack - thumbs up, both the orgnial and dierctors cut have superb commentries.

go for both, spend the money on thedierctors cut (and its lovely case!) and spend just a pound on the orignal.

MAKE THEM MAKE YOU WATCH IT!

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22 of 24 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A modern classic. 16 April 2006
Format:DVD
An extraordinary movie about love, death, madness, time travel and being a teenager, Donnie Darko is one of the most brilliant films to come out of Hollywood in recent years, and is all the more remarkable given the fact that it was made by a first-time director still in his twenties. The film follows the troubled teenaged Donnie and the increasingly bizarre events that seem to be centred on him. One of the central threads of the film is Donnie's series of encounters with a giant bunny rabbit called Frank who, the first time Donnie meets him, tells him that the world is going to end in 28 days, 6 hours, 42 minutes and 12 seconds. Due to the massive cult popularity the film attained, Kelly was invited to release his Director's Cut of the movie. In my view, the Director's Cut is definitely superior, with extra scenes that round out the story and some atmospheric visual effects they didn't have the money to do the first time round, but Kelly has emphasised that he sees the two cuts as being different versions of the film, rather than the Director's Cut being the definitive one. The Theatrical Cut presents the story in a more ambiguous way, with the Director's Cut presenting more clearly Kelly's own interpretation of the story (which has lead some fans to prefer the Theatrical Cut.) Apart from the different versions of the film, the only differences between the two DVDs are that the Director's Cut contains a few more extras and a new commentary with Kelly and his friend Kevin Smith. This film is a stunning achievement and is really worth getting slightly obsessed by...
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars good
this is a good film with good actors and was very pleased with how fast it was delievered and it came in very good condition.
Published 25 days ago by Pen Name
5.0 out of 5 stars quality film
definitely not your average story line but there's something hauntingly mystical about this film, 100% recommend it, as it was thoroughly entertaining
Published 1 month ago by Matty Riding
4.0 out of 5 stars Great film
Great film and you get to see Jaky Gyllenhaal in one of his earliest and youngest roles. Interesting watch and one that probably everyone should see since it gathered such an... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Mr. Thomas D. Hill
5.0 out of 5 stars :D
Amazing film
Amazing quality
Arrived Early (I love it when that happens)
I would recommend this for anyone; it's a cult classic.
Published 3 months ago by Michael Cormack
4.0 out of 5 stars Great!
I love Donnie Darko and so was extremely excited to watch the directors cut.
I must say it was good and I thoroughly enjoyed it but I still prefer the theatrical cut.
Published 3 months ago by James Morrall
1.0 out of 5 stars countdown to nothing
Having read rave reviews about this movie I was bitterly disappointed. James Stewart's invisible rabbit friend, Harvey, had more life in it than the miserable, moth-eaten abortion... Read more
Published 3 months ago by lycidas
4.0 out of 5 stars Bad presentation but fantastic film
Absolutely no bonus features and cover is not amazing quality if thats what you want in a dvd however the movie is a fantastic film :)
Published 3 months ago by Inny
5.0 out of 5 stars Yes
Just one of those really cool films, defiantly worth getting. It's just one of those movies you have to watch again immediately after watching it the first time.
Published 3 months ago by Gabriel Thomas
4.0 out of 5 stars When Fancy Dress Goes Bad
This is a bit of a confusing movie of you're a bit simple or maybe a retired boxer who's had one too many blows to the head. Read more
Published 4 months ago by MikeyP
5.0 out of 5 stars Donnie Darko
This is one of those films that you want to watch several times but have no idea why, apart from taking the pleasure of working out the plot. Great fun, specially for teenagers!
Published 4 months ago by Ms. A. Hawkins
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