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Vanilla Sky

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Vanilla Sky
File:Vanilla sky post.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byCameron Crowe
Written byAlejandro Amenábar
Mateo Gil
Cameron Crowe
Produced byCameron Crowe
Tom Cruise
Paula Wagner
Assistant Producer:
Endrick Lekay
Associate Producer:
Michael Doven
Scott M. Martin
Co-Producer:
Donald J. Lee Jr.
Executive Producer:
Bill Block
Fernando Bovaira
Danny Bramson
Patrick Wachsberger
Jonathan Sanger
StarringTom Cruise
Penélope Cruz
Kurt Russell
Jason Lee
Noah Taylor
and Cameron Diaz
CinematographyJohn Toll
Edited byJoe Hutshing
Mark Livolsi
Music byNancy Wilson
Production
companies
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
December 14, 2001
Running time
136 min.
CountryUnited States
LanguagesEnglish, Spanish, French
BudgetUS$68,000,000[1]
Box officeUS$203,388,341

Vanilla Sky is a 2001 American psychological thriller movie which has been variously characterized by published film critics as "an odd mixture of science fiction, romance, and reality warp",[2] "part Beautiful People fantasy, part New Age investigation of the Great Beyond",[3] a "love story, a struggle for the soul, or an existential confrontation with the eternal",[4] and an "erotic adventure, romance, comedy, mystery, and psychological thriller, with a dose of science fiction".[5]

Vanila Sky is a "very close remake"[6] of the 1997 Spanish movie Open Your Eyes (Abre los ojos), which was written by Alejandro Amenábar and Mateo Gil. Vanilla Sky stars Tom Cruise, Cameron Diaz, Penélope Cruz (a reprise of her performance in Abre los ojos), Jason Lee, and Kurt Russell. It was directed by Cameron Crowe, who also worked with Cruise in the movie Jerry Maguire, and co-produced this movie with Tom Cruise, Paula Wagner, and Cruise/Wagner Productions. Though Abre los ojos was received with much higher regard by international film critics[citation needed], Vanilla Sky had a wider distribution - in particular because it was made in the English language, which made it more suitable of most of Europe, North America, Africa, Australia, and some parts of Asia such as India, Hong Kong, and the Philippines - all of which where millions of people speak or understatnd English.

A Plot Outline

David Aames recently has become owner of his deceased father's publishing company, and begins to enjoy a wealthy lifestyle. David, through his friend Brian Shelby, is introduced to Sofia Serrano, and the two begin to flirt and become closer. When David's former girlfriend, Julianna Gianni, discovers this, she becomes extremely jealous. One day, she offers David a ride, but purposely crashes her car at high speed off a bridge; Julianna dies while David survives, though his face is scarred up so badly he wears a mask to hide the embarrassment from the world so that people will not stare or look at his face. On an evening out with Brian and Sofia after the crash, David becomes extremely intoxicated, much to Sofia's displeasure, and she and Brian leave David to wallow on a sidewalk. The next morning Sofia returns to help David back onto his feet, they begin to date steadily, and David has cosmetic surgery that restores his face to its appearance before the crash.

Though David's life seems perfect, he finds oddities about it, such as a completely empty Times Square. At times, he finds himself hallucinating, his face reverting to before the plastic surgery. A strange man appears at various locations to tell David he has the power to control the world. After one hallucination episode, David goes to Sofia's apartment to find Julianna there, and that all the old photos and pictures of David and Sofia have been replaced with Julianna. In a fit of rage, David kills Julianna by suffocation. He is arrested and put into prison, placed under the psychological care of Dr. Curtis McCabe. David, finding himself suffering from a form of amnesia, attempts to recount the recent events to Dr. McCabe, and the two discover that there may be a connection between David and a company known as "Life Extension", who place clinically-dead patients into cryonic chambers to awaken in the future when cures may be available. David and Dr. McCabe visit the company, who explain that they place their patients into a "Lucid Dream" state while in the cryogenics company. David recognizes that the reality he is in is his own Lucid Dream, and calls for Tech Support.

David escapes from the company office to find the mysterious man directing him to an elevator. As they rise to the top of an impossibly tall building, the man, revealing himself to be the tech support, explains David's true past: after passing out drunk on the sidewalk, he never saw Sofia again. Due to his depression, David sought the services of Life Extension, wishing to start the Lucid Dream the morning after the drunken incident, and to live under the "vanilla sky" his mother always talked about; he then committed suicide so that he may be placed in the cryogenic system, where he has been for the past 150 years. While David was experiencing the Lucid Dream, a malfunction of the system caused the dream to become a nightmare, merging Sofia and Julianna's personas and creating people, such as Dr. McCabe, out of his past memories. At the roof of the building, the man offers David a choice, to either be reinserted into the corrected Lucid Dream as to be together with Sofia forever, or to opt to wake up, though the latter requires a leap of faith off the building. David opts to be awakened so that he can live a real life, and he takes a few last moments to say goodbye to the Dream versions of Sofia and Brian, then jumps off the building, his memories flashing through his eyes as he falls. Just as he hits the ground, a voice tells David to wake up, and the film briefly focuses on his closed eye opening onto the real world.

The Cast

Interpretations

According to Cameron Crowe's commentary, there are four different interpretations of the ending:

  • "Tech support" is telling the truth: 150 years have passed since David Aames killed himself, and everything after his passing out on the sidewalk was a lucid dream.
  • The entire movie is a dream, as evidenced by the sticker on David's car that reads '2/30/01' (February 30 doesn't occur in the Gregorian calendar).
  • The entire movie after the crash is a dream that takes place while David is in a coma.
  • The entire movie is the plot of the book that Brian Shelby is writing.

The title of this movie is a reference to depictions of the skies in some of the paintings of Claude Monet. Crowe has noted that the presence of "vanilla skies" identifies the first Lucid Dream scene (morning reunion after club scene). All that follows is dream.[7]

Clues:

  • The very first audible whisper in the opening scene says the sentence "Abre los Ojos," (Open your Eyes) which is the name of the Spanish movie that Vanilla Sky is a remake of.
  • When Julianna Gianni's cell phone rings in the opening scene, the ring-tone is, "Row, row, row your boat....life is but a dream".
  • Early in the movie, Sofia wakes up next to David on the couch and asks David what he is watching on TV; he replies, "A great show called Sofia".
  • References to the Seven Dwarfs may be a clue, alluding to Snow White.
  • At David's birthday party, Brian's shirt has the word "fantasy" written on it.
  • In the scene where Benny the Dog is on Conan, the owner's shirt reads "LE", but there is a symbol of a man in between the "L" and "E", which makes the shirt read, "LIE".
  • The opening shot and the final shot frame the movie with a voice-over asking David to "open your eyes." Also, throughout the film, David is told to "wake up," and is often reminded that he is "living the dream."
  • When David is being processed after his arrest, the placard around his neck for the mugshot reads, in code, "When did the dream become a nightmare?" Some of the letters are literal; others are represented by numbers indicating their place in the alphabet.
  • When David's origin in the lucid dream is explained by Tech Support, the body bag He's placed in after his death which, when decoded, spell out, "Pleasant Dreams" also right under the "L.E." logo.
  • When David's origin in the lucid dream is explained by Tech Support, it shows the tank holding David in a cryogenic state. Under the tank's "David Aames" label is a "patient number" which, when decoded, spells out, "Pleasant Dreams". The same numbers and letters are shown during the process of reconstructing David's face.
  • Throughout the entire movie, the phrase "open your eyes" is used a lot. "Open Your Eyes" is the name of the Spanish movie that Vanilla Sky is a remake of, as well as what David should do (as opposed to being in a lucid dream).

Reception

Box office

Vanilla Sky opened at #1 at the box office in the United States when it was first presented on December 14, 2001. The opening weekend took in a gross income of $25,015,518 (24.9%). The final domestic gross income was $100.61 million while the foreign gross income was slightly higher at $102.76m for a Worldwide gross income of $203,388,341.[8] Against the $68 million, this movie was a clear financial hit.

Critical

Critical reaction was from mixed to negative. It currently holds a 39 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 157 reviews (62 positive, 95 negative).[9] Metacritic reported, based on 33 reviews, a "Mixed or Average" rating of 45 out of 100.[10]

Roger Ebert's printed review of Vanilla Sky gave it a quite positive three out of four stars:

Think it all the way through, and Cameron Crowe's Vanilla Sky is a scrupulously moral picture. It tells the story of a man who has just about everything, thinks he can have it all, is given a means to have whatever he wants, and loses it because — well, maybe because he has a conscience. Or maybe not. Maybe just because life sucks. Or maybe he only thinks it does. This is the kind of movie you don't want to analyze until you've seen it two times.

Ebert said that the ending "explains the mechanism of our confusion, rather than telling us for sure what actually happened."[11] The movie critic Richard Roeper greatly enjoyed this movie, calling it the second best movie of 2001.

A more mixed review from The New York Times early on calls Vanilla Sky a "highly entertaining, erotic science-fiction thriller that takes Mr. Crowe into Steven Spielberg territory", but then it notes:

As it leaves behind the real world and begins exploring life as a waking dream (this year's most popular theme in Hollywood movies with lofty ideas), Vanilla Sky loosens its emotional grip and becomes a disorganized and abstract if still-intriguing meditation on parallel themes. One is the quest for eternal life and eternal youth; another is guilt and the ungovernable power of the unconscious mind to undermine science's utopian discoveries. David's redemption ultimately consists of his coming to grips with his own mortality, but that redemption lacks conviction.[12]

A negative review was published by Salon.com, which called Vanilla Sky an "aggressively plotted puzzle picture, which clutches many allegedly deep themes to its heaving bosom without uncovering even an onion-skin layer of insight into any of them."[13] The review rhetorically asks:

Who would have thought that Cameron Crowe had a movie as bad as Vanilla Sky in him? It's a punishing picture, a betrayal of everything that Crowe has proved he knows how to do right....But the disheartening truth is that we can see Crowe taking all the right steps, the most Crowe-like steps, as he mounts a spectacle that overshoots boldness and ambition and idiosyncrasy and heads right for arrogance and pretension — and those last two are traits I never would have thought we'd have to ascribe to Crowe.[13]

Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian[6] and Gareth Von Kallenbach of the publication Film Threat[14] compared Vanilla Sky unfavorably to Open Your Eyes. Bradshaw says Open Your Eyes is "certainly more distinctive than" Vanilla Sky, which he describes as an "extraordinarily narcissistic high-concept vanity project for producer-star Tom Cruise." Other reviewers extrapolate from the knowledge that Cruise had bought the rights to do a version of Amenábar's movie.[2] A Village Voice reviewer characterized Vanilla Sky as "hauntingly frank about being a manifestation of its star's cosmic narcissism".[15]

Cameron Diaz's performance, however, was critically acclaimed, with the Los Angeles Times's film critic calling her "compelling as the embodiment of crazed sensuality"[16] and the New York Times reviewer saying she gives a "ferociously emotional" performance,[12] also receiving a Golden Globe Award nomination, a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination, a Critics' Choice Awards nomination, and an AFI Awards nomination.

The British television host Jeremy Clarkson stated during an interview with Timothy Spall on BBC motoring series Top Gear that Vanilla Sky is one of his favorite movies[17].

A Note on the Filming of Vanilla Sky

The shooting of this movie in the scene where there is a completely-empty Times Square in New York was filmed in Times Square on November 12, 2000, in the hours before 10 a.m.. A large section of blocks around Times Square was closed off while this scene was shot.

The Musical Score

Vanilla Sky featured original compositions from Nancy Wilson and one original composition by Paul McCartney. Other songs used in Vanilla Sky include those from Sigur Rós, Radiohead, R.E.M., Joan Osborne, Todd Rundgren, Thievery Corporation, Underworld, Jeff Buckley, U2, The Beach Boys, and The Chemical Brothers. It features the track "Untitled #4 (a.k.a. 'Njósnavélin')" by Sigur Rós, but because that track had not been recorded in a studio during production, the version featured in this movie is a recording of a live performance at the 2000 Roskilde Festival in Denmark. Crowe thought that Vanilla Sky had musical overtones, and he expressed this through the use of music throughout this movie. The compact disc and tape recording, Music from Vanilla Sky, was published as this movie's commercial soundtrack. The soundtrack received positive reviews from some soundtrack critics. Vanilla Sky's musical selection not only rather successfully evokes the emotions of the characters, but some reviewers consider it to be a compilational masterpiece.[18][19][20]

The song, "The Healing Room", by Sinead O'Connor, can also be heard during the video presentation of the "Lucid Dream" in Rebecca Dearborn's office, although it is not featured in the published soundtrack recording.

See also

References

  1. ^ IMDb estimate
  2. ^ a b Vanilla guy / Smirky Tom Cruise lacks the depth for complex, surreal film
  3. ^ http://ae.philly.com/entertainment/ui/philly/movie.html?id=53986&reviewId=6605
  4. ^ Journal of Religion and Film: Vanilla Sky Review by Jason M. Flato
  5. ^ Movies: Cincinnati.Com
  6. ^ a b Vanilla Sky | Reviews | guardian.co.uk Film
  7. ^ Mentioned by the director in the commentary track for the DVD release
  8. ^ http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=vanillasky.htm
  9. ^ Rotten Tomatoes. "Vanilla Sky".
  10. ^ Metacritic. "Vanilla Sky". Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  11. ^ :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews :: Vanilla Sky (xhtml)
  12. ^ a b FILM REVIEW; Plastic Surgery Takes A Science Fiction Twist - New York Times
  13. ^ a b Salon.com Arts & Entertainment | "Vanilla Sky"
  14. ^ Review by Gareth Von Kallenbach, Film Threat
  15. ^ village voice > film > Icon See Clearly Now by Michael Atkinson
  16. ^ From Paella to Pot Roast - MOVIE REVIEW - Los Angeles Times - calendarlive.com
  17. ^ "Top Gear; Series 06, Episode 11"
  18. ^ Green, Brad. "VANILLA SKY: SOUNDTRACK". Urban Cinefile. Retrieved 2009-02-23.
  19. ^ O’Faolain, Eoin. "5 Soundtracks that are Better than their Movies". www.screenhead.com. Retrieved 2009-02-23.
  20. ^ Candler, T C. "INDEPENDENT CRITICS - Review Page". www.independentcritics.com. Retrieved 2009-02-23.