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Noise (2007 American film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused withNoise (2007 Australian film).
2007 film
Noise
Film poster
Directed byHenry Bean
Written byHenry Bean
Produced byHenry Bean
Susan Hoffman
StarringTim Robbins
Bridget Moynahan
William Hurt
CinematographyAndrij Parekh
Edited byJulie Carr
Music byPhillip Johnston
Production
companies
Distributed byTHINKFilm
Release dates
  • October 22, 2007 (2007-10-22) (Rome Film Festival)
  • May 9, 2008 (2008-05-09)
Running time
88 minutes
LanguagesEnglish
Russian
Box office$16,934[1]

Noise is a 2007 Americancomedydrama film written and directed byHenry Bean. It starsTim Robbins andBridget Moynahan. Robbins plays a successful lawyer inManhattan named David Owen who is bothered by all the noise in the city, and who resorts tovandalism to put a stop to it, adopting the identity of "The Rectifier". His acts of vandalism provoke the mayor of the city, played byWilliam Hurt.

The film premiered October 22, 2007 at the Rome Film Festival. It was later shown at the AFI Film Festival on November 6, 2007. It opened inlimited release in theUnited States on May 9, 2008.[2]

Plot

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David Owen, a New York lawyer, is constantly plagued by noise, particularlycar alarms, but alsoburglar alarms andbackup beepers. Despite putting up with the noise for years, including the formative years of his daughter, he finally breaks into a car to shut off its alarm, and is arrested by police. Owen and his family try living in the countryside for a weekend, but it only replaces one set of noise problems with another. Despite attempting to legally deal with the constant barrage of noise, he makes no progress, and continues to resort to vandalism, resulting in higher and higher court penalties and straining his relationship with his wife, who finally asks him to leave.

While living on his own, Owen continues to destroy alarms, and progressively damages cars based on the number of violations. During this, he meets and begins a relationship with Ekaterina, a Russian student. She confronts him with the fact that he is "The Rectifier", a vigilante personality, complete with monikered stickers, that Owen has adopted. After falling in with him, Ekaterina convinces Owen to start a ballot initiative. While initially slow, the measure garners explosive popularity. Despite this, it is shut down by Mayor Schneer, who disdains the Rectifier and believes supporting the measure would encourage vigilantism.

After being shut down through a loophole that prevents the ballot measure from appearing, Owen outfits a car with numerous alarms and much louder horns. He then parks in front of city hall and sets off his alarms, citing the various laws that so frustrated Owen initially when city hall security demands he turn them off. After enraging a nearby tenant, Judge Kornreich, his vehicle is attacked and the judge is mistakenly arrested as The Rectifier. Kornreich sues Owen for pain and suffering damages, and Owen goes to court. During his cross-examination of Kornreich, Owen intentionally alludes that his actions could be consideredassault andbattery, establishing a legalprecedent. Owen is found guilty, though Kornreich obviously intends to be lenient on him. Having won a legal victory, Owen reunites with his wife. Walking out of the courthouse, an activist approaches Owen about blowing up a billboard TV that has been causing accidents and is an eyesore of the cityscape. A dual ending is provided, one in which Owen flees with the activist, and one where he politely declines to accompany her and gets into a cab with his wife.

Cast

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Production

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Henry Bean has called the film partlyautobiographical.[3] Stephen Holden wrote that the film "is the second part of a projected "fanatic trilogy" that began withThe Believer."[3]

Critical reception

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The film received mixed reviews from critics.The New York Times film criticStephen Holden calledNoise "a one-trick film that rapidly wears out its welcome." Holden said the film "is shallow and loud" and "lurches unsteadily between drama and comedy." Holden wrote "Its performances are discordant" and said "you have to wonder to what degree Mr. Robbins, an actor famous for his political activism, is here simply because he shares Mr. Bean's outrage."[3]

David Denby ofThe New Yorker wrote that the film "is certainly odd, but the movie is alive with the creative madness ofNew York." Denby said "Surely a more glamorous actor would have givenNoise a lighter, more satirical spin, but Robbins makes David a lost, unhappy man who needs to save himself, and that's the right way to go—it turns a one-note story into a universal fable." Denby praised the performance ofMargarita Levieva as Ekatrina. Denby wrote "What savesNoise—and makes it almost continuously entertaining—is Bean's sense of the city as a gathering place of clever, chattering people."[4]

Box office performance

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The film opened inlimited release in theUnited States on May 9, 2008 and grossed $3,697 in 2 theaters its opening weekend.[5]

References

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  1. ^"Noise".
  2. ^"Noise (2007/II) - Release dates".Internet Movie Database. Retrieved2008-05-13.
  3. ^abcStephen Holden (2008-05-09)."Aural Examination".The New York Times. Retrieved2008-05-13.
  4. ^David Denby (2008-05-19)."The Unquiet Life".The New Yorker. Retrieved2008-05-14.
  5. ^"Noise (2008) - Weekend Box Office Results".Box Office Mojo. Retrieved2008-05-13.

External links

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