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The Forgotten [DVD] [2004] [2005]
 
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The Forgotten [DVD] [2004] [2005]

Anthony Edwards , Julianne Moore , Joseph Ruben    Suitable for 12 years and over   DVD
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (36 customer reviews)
Price: £4.89 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Actors: Anthony Edwards, Julianne Moore, Gary Sinise, Dominic West, Linus Roache
  • Directors: Joseph Ruben
  • Producers: Joe Roth
  • Format: Subtitled, PAL
  • Language English
  • Subtitles: Arabic, Bulgarian, Dutch, English, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Icelandic, Polish, Romanian, Spanish, Turkish
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 12
  • Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
  • DVD Release Date: 21 Mar 2005
  • Run Time: 87 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (36 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0006ZLD14
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 5,306 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Amazon.com

With a plot that might've been lifted from The X-Files, nothing is quite what it seems in The Forgotten, a psychological conspiracy thriller with Julianne Moore doing fine work as a grieving mother whose nine-year-old son was killed in a plane crash. At least, that's what she's been led to believe, but when even her husband (Anthony Edwards) tries to convince her that she's delusional and never had a child, things start to get very spooky indeed. Dominic West (from HBO's superb series The Wire ) plays a similarly traumatized father, and when they witness some very strange events--and a mysterious man (Linus Roache) who might be indestructible--this glorified B-movie potboiler directed by Joseph Ruben (best known for Dreamscape and The Stepfather) turns into a preposterous but entertaining trip into The Twilight Zone territory. Featuring Alfre Woodard as an intuitive New York detective and Gary Sinise as a seemingly sympathetic psychiatrist, The Forgotten offers adequate shocks and an intriguing, otherworldly study of tenacious parental instinct. It deserved its mixed reviews, but it's a fun spook-fest for rainy-day viewing. --Jeff Shannon, Amazon.com

Product Description







A grieving mother, Telly Parada, is struggling to cope with the loss of her 9-year-old son. She is stunned when her psychiatrist and her husband tell her that she has created eight years of memories of a son she never had. But when she meets the father of one of her son's friends who is having the same experience, Telly embarks on a mission to prove her son's existence and her sanity.






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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
To say much about the plot is to give too much away. Suffice to say that if you want to really enjoy this movie stop reading the reviews as some other customers have 'given it away'.

This film dares to cross genres every twenty minutes, starting as an intriguing mystery and developing into a complete mindbend. Yes, it's far-fetched but so was 'Jurassic Park' and no-one complains about that! If you like your drama a little unpredicable get this now. For the rest of you, there's always 'Fantastic Four'...

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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
The forgotten 29 Jan 2005
By A Customer
Format:DVD
I saw this film at the cinema. It is all about a woman who has a child, and then suddenly he is gone, and everything about him has gon, except the memory of him in his mothers head. She wants to know what happened, and everyone makes out she is crazy, but she is not. Its full of mystery, and the way in which the film has been done in very clever. Its not the bestest thriller film, but it is a good one. Worth the watch. Involves the woman then going in search for clues and ideas to what happened, she has flashbacks, she meets another person who has had the same thing happen, but he doesn't remember his child, and thinks she is crazy. It is a desperate struggle of a woman trying to get her son back, and convince this man to get his daughter back, and to find out what happened and why. Good plot, sounds boring but is really good. All revealed at end of film. Good ending. Worth the watch.
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31 of 34 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
The Forgotten is a surprisingly entertaining thriller, most notable for the performance of Julianne Moore who readily throws herself into the role with her customary abandon and bravado. Part psuedo science fiction, and part supernatural mystery, the producers can probably be forgiven for the many plot holes, and unanswered questions; also, you know there's really a problem when malevolent looking federal agents try to cover up the evidence with mere wallpaper. But the movie is certainly beautiful to look at with the gorgeous Julianne constantly bathed in ghostly and ethereal hues of blue and grey that contrast startlingly with her fiery red hair- there's also some fabulous aerial views of New York City, the symbolic significance of which becomes obvious later in the movie.

Questions of loss, grief, and the special union between mother and son form the thematic center of the Forgotten, as Moore plays Telly Paretta, a woman haunted by the memory of her son Sam. The child died in plane 14 months ago, and her worried and affectionate husband, played by Anthony Edwards, and her composed, consoling psychiatrist, Dr. Munce (Gary Sinise), try in vain to help her cope with her sudden loss. She constantly watches a video of Sam, moons over photographs of him, and lovingly touches a baseball mitt that he left behind. Telly is obviously exploring the emotional pain and grief experienced by a mother, and is trying desperately to move on. She's recently decided to return to her job as a freelance editor.

It soon becomes clear that things are not as they seem. Sam's image mysteriously begins to disappear from the photographs, and then her husband, her doctor, and even her neighbors tell her that she never had a son. Telly is convinced they are wrong, and fiercely maintains that her son was real. One night, in the local leaf blown and windswept park, she meets the drunken Ash Correll (Dominic West), the father of a girl who was also supposedly killed in the same plane crash with Sam. She desperately tries to make him remember. Ash, a former professional hockey player, is drowning in booze and fiercely denies ever having a daughter. At first he thinks Telly is crazy but then he uncovers some evidence, and is forced to face up to the truth.

There's lots of gratuitous action - mostly a lot of running - interspersed with some quieter moments as Telly and Ash try to reconcile their differences and stay focused on finding out whether their children are really dead and where they might be hidden. There's also a constant eerie and peculiar atmosphere created as Telly becomes convinced that both her and Ash are constantly being watched by "something." The acting is pretty good, with Moore and West giving the strongest and most provocative performances, and the interplay between them full of tension, but also interspersed with some nice moments of quiet intimacy. Moore is particularly good - bring a blunt, gustiness to the role, and she is totally convincing as a mother who obviously had a very special bond with her son. Telly and Ashe are two very different people who normally wouldn't have had much to do with each other, but who have been flung together through monumental adversity.

The cinematography is quite beautiful and the film generally has a great sense of pacing. Viewers will find themselves trying to figure whether there is some grand conspiracy or not, and the eventual resolution, while surprising, still leaves a lot of questions unanswered. But with all its faults, The Forgotten is an interesting, mind twisting thriller, that effectively explores the intensity of memory, the sadness and desperation of grief, and how the human mind ultimately handles these intense emotions. Mike Leonard January 05.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
AWESOME!
THE FORGOTTEN is an absolutely fantastic action film starring Julianne Moore. It is very sad, scary and awesome! Read more
Published 13 months ago by G. Stephenson
The Forgotten!
I watched this film again last night for the first time since watching it originally and was pleasantly surprised by how good it was. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Je Salter
A movie best forgotten?
"The Forgotten" is a science fiction movie featuring Julianne Moore, Dominic West and Gary Sinise.

The actors are good, the concept interesting, but the movie never... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Ashtar Command
not a bad lil film
Julianne Moore normally annoys the hell out of me, and she did for the first half of this film where she seemed to be a total nutcase. Read more
Published on 8 April 2008 by Ms. F. I. Macdonald
Meaningless paranoid fable
A small film that is suspenseful and well done as altogether. But... Some extraterrestrials are alluded at as experimenting on human beings. Read more
Published on 2 Dec 2007 by Jacques COULARDEAU
[3.5]--Mother defeats predators with ... LOVE
I cannot say I completely loathed this film. The mood and atmosphere of the film was eerie and creepy, but nothing we haven't seen before. Read more
Published on 3 July 2007 by Jenny J.J.I.
it really is best forgotten about
I have always quite liked Julianne Moore. With a string of interesting roles in such as films as Far From Heaven, Magnolia, and her simply superb supporting role in the Big... Read more
Published on 2 July 2007 by Mr. Rwj Nixon
dreadful
What I had expected to be a thrilling and exciting movie was in the end nothing more than a badly deliberated alien movie. Read more
Published on 18 May 2006 by S. Martina
Unexpected...
I saw this film advertised for cinema, and just HAD to see it. I thought it was a mystery/thriller...turns out it was yet another alien-abduction film. Read more
Published on 19 Mar 2006
Ludicrous plot
This was one of the worst films I have seen in a long time. It had a promising start - gripping and intriguing. Read more
Published on 28 Jan 2006
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