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75 of 84 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars This is getting to be a habit, Clint!
Hereafter is a European art-house movie with Hollywood production values.
It's yet another Eastwood movie that ranks as the best American film of the
year because it engages both heart and mind with its tale of three individuals
in different parts of the world disconnected from life by a brush with death.

In Asia, famous French TV reporter Marie...
Published on 3 Feb 2011 by Rob

versus
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Not sure what to make of it
I really can't my mind up whether this curve ball offering from Eastwood is genius or just plain daft. I must confess however that I rather enjoyed it, although I always enjoy watching Matt Damon and I particularly fancy Cecile de France, so I can't honestly say it was the story that made it for me.

Marcus (Frankie McLaren) loses his twin brother Jason (George...
Published 21 months ago by Jones the Film


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75 of 84 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars This is getting to be a habit, Clint!, 3 Feb 2011
By 
Rob (Oxford, UK) - See all my reviews
Hereafter is a European art-house movie with Hollywood production values.
It's yet another Eastwood movie that ranks as the best American film of the
year because it engages both heart and mind with its tale of three individuals
in different parts of the world disconnected from life by a brush with death.

In Asia, famous French TV reporter Marie (a luminous Cecile deFrance) briefly
dies during a horrific natural disaster and has a vision of what she suspects
may be the afterlife. Back home she can't get the experience out of her mind
and her obsession threatens her high-flying career and friendships. In San
Francisco, lonely, middle-aged factory worker George (Matt Damon) can apparently
talk to the dead but his 'gift' makes it impossible for him to form relationships
with anybody. Finally, on a grim housing estate in South London, young twins
Marcus and Jason (George & Frankie McClaren) try to fend off social workers from
taking their druggie Mum (Lyndsey Marchal) away. But when tragedy strikes Marcus
loses the brother he always depended on and that need drives him into the arms of
charlatans promising contact with the dead.

This is Eastwood's quietest film and one of his very best. The director has
always exhibited a fondness for emphasising character over plot but here he
goes further than ever before, luxuriating in the lives and surroundings of
these three very different people. Hereafter has almost no plot, a third of
it is subtitled, there's no villain, the film asks questions without supplying
answers, the actors don't 'act' in any showy Hollywood sense of the term, the
most spectacular sequence comes right at the start instead of at the end, and
death is the starting point for both the characters and the story rather than
the climax.

All things that are clearly going to alienate a section of the movie-going
public simply because they're so unaccustomed to experiencing that. And yet
the same film features three ordinary people - not the buffed up superheroes
of so much contemporary American cinema - the mood isn't one of overriding
anger or self-pity (again, as so much modern American cinema tends to be) but
compassionate and thoughtful, kind of contemplative, and in its quietness
remarkably compelling. As the American critic Roger Ebert said, it induces in
the viewer something akin to the feeling of a reverie.

The actors are extraordinary. Matt Damon gives the best performance I've ever
seen from him. His lonely factory worker who aches for human contact and goes
to sleep listening to Dickens audio books is so heartfelt you find yourself
completely rooting for him but at the same time it's a totally unshowy
performance. That same low key quality applies in fact to the whole cast.
Cecile deFrance, looking a little like a young Julie Christie, is simply
terrific here, both intelligent & vulnerable, and the McClaren twins
have a rawness and authenticity that just works.

The craft side is equally impressive with the film moving smoothly between the
three story lines in 15 min chunks thanks to Eastwood's ace editors Joel Cox
and Gary Roach. Tom Stern's excellent photography gives each setting - Paris,
San Francisco and London - a distinct look and on the musical side Eastwood
himself contributes a lovely and sparingly used piano piece.

Those fearing some sort of preachy Hollywood confection about the afterlife
needn't worry. Even the exact nature of George's talent is ambiguous. We never
see him talking to an apparition, nor does he convey any warnings or
premonitions from beyond the grave. There's none of that. In fact if you watch
carefully you'll note that George tells his subjects nothing they don't already
know or could have imagined themselves. Revealingly, what messages he does
deliver all reinforce screenwriter Peter Morgan's key point; that there's no help
to be had from the dead, we're on our own and what matters are the love and the
connections we forge with others in this life.

Morgan's script gives short-shrift to both organised religion and the network
of New Age frauds who profit from people's misery. One of the more amusing
sequences shows Marcus visiting a succession of con men 'psychics' each of
whom offers increasingly ludicrous methods of contact with the dear departed.
Yet if all that sounds coldly secular and atheist Eastwood's film is deeply
sympathetic toward the need for those who've lost loved ones - who've ever
wondered what happens when we die - to voice their thoughts, and skewers a
materialistic western culture that fears and sidelines anyone who does.

Hereafter doesn't say there is an afterlife. On that point it is ambiguous but
in that ambiguity resides a genuine sense of mystery. It doesn't pretend to
have answers but simply asks the questions and it does so with intelligence and
compassion. It tells a story about lonely hearts under the shadow of death yet
comes down on the side of life, love and simple human connection - not with
ghosts - but with each other. I loved it.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A great film, 5 Sep 2012
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This review is from: Hereafter (DVD)
This is one of the most intriging films I have seen in a while. It was good to see Matt Damon play a completely different role from his usual type of films. It was quite thought provoking, moving and well worth watching. The idea of the hereafter a wonderful way to look at life after death. All the characters drew you in to their worlds. A great watch.
I would recommend this to everyone.
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23 of 27 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Thought Provoking!, 13 Feb 2012
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This review is from: Hereafter [Blu-ray] [Region Free] (Blu-ray)
I recently watched Hereafter after a little deliberation.. But I have to say, I was so engrossed throughout the whole film. The tsunami sequence at the begining were breath taking and very realistic. I am very interested in the theory of life after death, after a serious accident killed by brother and seriously injured me. I actually died twice and experience something very strange.. But back to the film. It had me hooked from the beginning to end. It had some very moving parts and some parts that really made you pay attention. This is a very thought provoking, moving, interesting film. I recommend it 100percent.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Hereafter, 23 July 2011
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This review is from: Hereafter (DVD)
An intricate and fascinating film, directed with an interesting juxtaposition of culture - almost documentary in its composition. A tantalising insight into life following life...a comfort - more films like this please!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars great flim with a great acting cast, 29 April 2013
By 
Roy W. Bennett "wilson11" (shropshire,england) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: Hereafter [DVD] (DVD)
Although somewhat of a sad start it developed into one of the best "feel good factor films i've seen in a long time. The acting is top quality with strong performances from MATT DAMON and CECILE de FRANCE and great back up from all the supporting actors. although a bit of a contentious subject, it is given crediblity from the weighty perfomances of both the leading players and the supporting staff. I can't recommend it highly enough.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyed every minute., 17 Mar 2013
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Saw this film at the cinema and thoroughly enjoyed it so bought the DVD so that I can watch at my leisure any time. Would recommend. Good story line with Matt Damon to drool over to boot!
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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Two hours of life well spent, 18 Jun 2011
By 
Chris White (United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
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If you were to ask the younger generation to name an accomplished feat of direction, they would probably cite the work of someone like Michael Bay as being without parallel (which it is, if you think about it). For those of us who knew cinema before CGI and appreciate a more restrained and mature style of filmmaking, Clint Eastwood's oeuvre comes pretty high on the list.

Reaching middle-age, one finds oneself more often contemplating the fact that sometime in the future a lot of things won't exist. While the disappearance of the Transformers franchise should certainly be spiritually uplifting, its coinciding with an inability to breathe does raise a few concerns. Not least, what happens afterwards?

Clint Eastwood has taken a carefully honed screenplay by Peter Morgan and woven three disparate tales about personal trauma and how those affected seek answers. Rather than anchor the narrative in the United States, two of the character arcs take place in Europe, making it an odd cinematic hybrid. However, the arthouse-style subtitled French sequences combine well with those set in London, which, if you knew no different, could have been directed by Ken Loach or Mike Leigh.

It makes for a refreshing and engaging film: a human drama rather than the supernatural one that the trailers and poster art would suggest. Matt Damon as always turns in a skilled performance, playing a genuine psychic who wants to escape what he has become. He is supported by a diverse cast of European talent, no less able. Not content with directorial duties, Eastwood once again composes his own music that underscores certain dramatic points unobtrusively and lyrically.

It's perhaps fitting that viewers are left to take what they will by story's end. Belief is a subjective thing but the final scene is by no means a downbeat one. I finished watching it happy to have followed the characters' journeys and also quite moved in one or two places. When Clint Eastwood confronts his own hereafter, he will leave behind a body of work as actor and director that is most definitely unparalleled - in the best sense of the word.

The Blu-ray contains 42 minutes' worth of 'focus points' that can be accessed within or apart from the movie as well as a 90-minute retrospective of Eastwood's career up to and including 2009's Invictus. (Note that these bonus features appear to be only available on the Triple Play edition. The Double Play version contains just the film and is in DVD packaging.)
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5.0 out of 5 stars If You Get Eastwood, You'll Get This, 11 May 2013
I approached this film with caution but how wrong I was. Eastwood is a master film maker and this is one of his most deepest and touching films.
I don't want to spoil it by revealing the plot so i'll just say that if you love the french movies of old you'll love the style of this. What other director has the flair and knowledge to direct in this manner? only eastwood and there's so much of him in this if you know where to look. Sure its a little slow at times but thats ok.
All actors are great even ... oops, don't want to reveal too much. Have a night in and open your mind. You'll like it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Good film, 6 May 2013
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This review is from: Hereafter (DVD)
A bit slow and confusing in the beginning but bear with it as it all comes together through the film and has a very good ending.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating, 16 Mar 2013
By 
Martin H (Norwich, UK .) - See all my reviews
Hereafter begins with a vivid depiction of the december '04 South Asian Tsunami. French Journalist Marie (Cecile de France) survives it, and undergoes a near death experience, which changes her.
Then it switches to London, and, later, depicts one of the 7/7/05 terrorist bombings.
But it's not an action film. Or a ghost story. Some people don't like it, perhaps partly because it accepts spiritual life after physical death as a reality, which not everyone is comfortable with, or willing to believe without 'definite proof'.
It alludes to allegations of a conspiracy amongst the scientific establishment, to cover up known evidence of an afterlife.
Also it features obviously fake, and/or nutty 'mediums', so not suggesting they are all genuine.
It's certainly sad, though I did not find it depressing, and it ends promisingly for at least two of its three main characters, one of whom is a child.
Some of the dialogue is in French with subtitles. It's definitely not aimed at a typical teenage audience, but if you like intelligent, thoughtful, interesting, unpredictable and well crafted dramas, and are not entirely closed-minded re. an afterlife I'd highly recommend it.
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Hereafter [Blu-ray] [Region Free]
Hereafter [Blu-ray] [Region Free] by Clint Eastwood (Blu-ray - 2011)
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