Donnie Darko
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Donnie Darko is a 2001 film, and the first feature-length film by writer and director Richard Kelly.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0446819/?fr=c2l0ZT1kZnx0dD0xfGZiPXV8cG49MHxrdz0xfHE9UmljaGFyZCBLZWxseXxmdD0xfG14PTIwfGxtPTUwMHxjbz0xfGh0bWw9MXxubT0x;fc=1;ft=20;fm=1 | title = Richard Kelly (II) | publisher = Internet Movie Database | accessdate = 2006-04-08 }}</ref> Set in 1988, the movie is a psychological science fiction film about a boy named Donnie Darko who, after narrowly escaping death, has visions of a grotesque, bipedal, giant rabbit named Frank who predicts when the world will end. It stars Jake Gyllenhaal as Donnie, Jena Malone, Mary McDonnell, Drew Barrymore, Patrick Swayze, Noah Wyle and Maggie Gyllenhaal.
The film did not perform well in theaters, but since its release on home video, it has become a cult hit. In the United Kingdom, it sold moderately well on DVD, before being reissued in a budget edition with no director's commentary or other extras, where it shot to No. 1 in the DVD sales chart.
Contents |
Cast
Plot synopsis
The plot of Donnie Darko is somewhat confusing, and much of it deals with existentialism and includes paradoxes that are never explained. As such, multiple interpretations exist.
The film is set in 1988, an election year, in the fictional community of Middlesex, Virginia.
In the middle of the night, on October 2, 1988, Donnie is awakened from his sleep by a strange voice and led out onto a golf course where he converses with a demonic-looking, man-sized rabbit named Frank who tells him that the world will end in 28 days, 6 hours, 42 minutes and 12 seconds. (There are many theories as to why this number was chosen. Some believe that it relates to the amount of time the moon takes to orbit around the Earth [29 days, 5 hours, 41 minutes and 11 seconds], but no confirmation of this has been attained. Another theory is that once the numbers are added together (28+6+42+12) it gives 88 which is the year the film is set.) After waking up on the golf course the next morning, Donnie returns home to discover that a huge jet engine has fallen from the sky and into his bedroom. So begins a series of events which bring together Donnie and a young woman named Gretchen.
There is an early indication of Donnie's mental illness (specifically psychosis) when his sister accuses him of not taking his medication. Donnie continues to see Frank and begins to see "liquid spears" emerging from people's chests, the paths of which indicate the actions those people will undertake in the immediate future. Whether this is indicative of mental illness, science fiction, or both, is left to the viewer.
Richard Kelly has made his own thoughts clear through the audio commentaries on the two DVDs, the included Philosophy of Time Travel, and in various interviews. His intended plot is as follows: At midnight a tangent universe spins off of the Primary Universe, signified by the appearance of an Artifact; here represented by a jet engine. Tangent Universes are inherently unstable and will collapse in less than a month, taking the Primary Universe with it, if not closed off. Closing the Tangent Universe is the duty of the Living Receiver (Donnie), given super powers to perform this task. Those who die within the Tangent Universe are the Manipulated Dead (Frank and, according to the back of the book, Gretchen) who are also given certain powers, understanding of what is going on, and the ability to contact the Living Receiver via the Fourth Dimensional Construct (water). Everyone else in the orbit of the Living Receiver are the Manipulated Living, who are subconsciously drawn to push and prod the Living Receiver towards his destiny, closing the Tangent Universe and, apparently, dying by the Artifact. Since the Manipulated Dead Frank-rabbit appears before the Tangent Universe is created, and before he himself is assumed to be created when Frank is shot by Donnie, it follows that this Manipulated Dead Frank-rabbit could not have come from the Frank seen in the movie, but the Frank, shot by Donnie, in an unseen previous Tangent Universe. Ultimately, Donnie Darko is about Donnie's first successful quest in ending the temporal paradox cycle or "time-loop" which he is caught in (not unlike Bill Murray in the movie "Groundhog Day").
The chain of events in brief is as follows: the Manipulated Dead, Frank, rouses Donnie, the Living Receiver, from his bed, and compels him to leave his house, starting a causal loop. Frank tells him that the Tangent Universe will collapse in 28 days. The next day Donnie goes to school. His English teacher, strangely, tells new girl Gretchen to sit next to the cutest boy in the room and she chooses Donnie (this begins the romance that ends badly and pushes Donnie to his final action). That night Frank appears to Donnie and makes him flood the school. As a result Donnie walks Gretchen home and asks her out. A bit later, Frank appears to Donnie and tells him to "burn it to the ground", so Donnie burns down the house of Jim Cunningham, a motivational speaker. When the firemen come to investigate the fire, they discover a secret room filled with pedophilic material. As a result, Donnie's physical education teacher decides to defend Cunningham, who she believes has been framed. This causes Donnie's mother to chaperone her daughter's dance troupe on their way to California to perform on Star Search (they board the airplane whose engine becomes the artifact in the Tangent Universe). Because of this, Donnie and his older sister, Elizabeth, are able to throw a party while the parents are away. This leads to a romantic interlude between Donnie and Gretchen. At the same time, Frank, Donnie's sister Elizabeth's boyfriend, realizes they've run out of alcohol at the party and drives off with a friend to pick up more beer.
End Game
Image:Donniedarkoskelcostume.jpg After their interlude Donnie decides to take Gretchen to see Grandma Death (aka Roberta Sparrow, the author of Philosophy of Time Travel). They stumble upon two bullies that were searching through Ms. Sparrow's cellar for her rumored treasure. Donnie, Gretchen and the bullies struggle, and Gretchen is thrown into the road. Roberta Sparrow, a senile old woman, is standing in the middle of the road checking her mail because Donnie wrote her a letter earlier, when Frank comes upon her in his car. He swerves to avoid her, but hits Gretchen, killing her. Donnie becomes enraged and kills Frank, becoming willing to do what must be done in order to save Gretchen. The plane with his mother and sister passes by the wormhole (or timestorm as referenced in the DVD) and the engine is ripped off and thrust back in time. The audience knows that the mom and sister are on this plane, after Mrs. Darko leaves a message saying that they are catching the red eye back. Donnie reappears back in his room in the Primary Universe, and lies in his bed laughing as the engine falls through the roof and kills him. After experiencing the Tangent Universe, and seeing the paths that every living thing follows throughout time, Donnie dies so that Gretchen, his mother, his little sister and Frank may live. According to the Philosophy of Time Travel, every Living Receiver dies by the Artifact. A simple explanation of the movie and its ending, based on the DVD commentary, is that Donnie had to make sure, with Frank the rabbit's guidance, that the chain of events that caused the engine to go through the portal occurs. If he failed, the portal would have caused the end of the world (like Frank said). Template:Advert The film is more than a time-travel story. It is a darkly comic satire of school life, so-called self-help gurus, teen angst, and drill teams. Jake Gyllenhaal has received much praise for his performance as the disaffected, yet charming Donnie, and the rest of the cast also delivers effectively quirky performances.
Much of the backstory is explained on the official Donnie Darko website, which acts as a combination puzzle and teaser for the movie. It shows that Donnie was institutionalized before the events of the movie occur, and offers other details that help in explaining the goings-on of the movie, as well as a phone call and transcript between the unidentified 'CALLER 1' and 'CALLER 2' regarding the mysterious 'Engine X'. The director's commentary on the DVD also gives crucial details, such as the point of departure between the real world and the alternate universe — not when the engine crashes through the ceiling, but instead a few minutes before, when Donnie is called out to meet Frank for the first time.
- If one watches the DVD with Richard Kelly and Jake Gyllenhaal it is revealed that his mother and sister's plane being used is insignificant, his return to the original timeline in no way spares them from the future, as his decision was already made upon the death of Gretchen (Ensurance Trap).
There are many easter eggs present in the film, including a reflection of Ronald Reagan being visible in the principal's office.
Production
The movie was shot in 28 days, exactly the time-span of the movie itself, on a budget of under US$5 million. Some viewers have seen here a reference or homage to the 1950 motion picture Harvey, but director Kelly has denied any such intention and in fact has stated that he had never seen Harvey before directing this film. However, the film is situated within a larger cultural discourse in which rabbits have a paranormal quality, including the White Rabbit in Alice in Wonderland which leads Alice into a parallel universe through a rabbit hole — perhaps an echo of the wormhole — see below.
Director's cut
Image:Donniedarkodvd.jpeg A director's cut of the movie debuted on June 4, 2004 in Seattle, Washington and was released in New York and Los Angeles on July 23, 2004. Twenty minutes of footage, including interstitial excerpts from the in-movie book The Philosophy of Time Travel, were added, as well as some soundtrack changes. The director's cut DVD, released on February 15 2005, included the new footage and additional soundtrack changes, as well as some additional features exclusive to its two-DVD set, including excerpts from the storyboard, a 52 minute production diary, #1 fan video, a "cult following" video interviewing British fans, and the new director's cut cinematic trailer. A director's cut DVD was released as a giveaway with copies of the British Sunday Times newspaper on February 19, 2006. In the director's cut, Donnie simply follows the spear, as opposed to the spear forming a finger and beckoning him. Also, Donnie’s psychiatrist informs Donnie that his pills are placebos and the Holiday Inn scene is lengthened. Many scenes in Ms. Pomeroy's classroom were put back in, including a poetry reading, the banning of Graham Greene's The Destructors and its replacement with Watership Down, and the class later watching the animated movie Watership Down. Additionally, Frank's apology during the cinema / Evil Dead scene is removed, Karen Pomeroy's firing scene is shortened, and the scene in which Donnie asks her about "Cellar Door" is longer and shows almost entirely different dialogue.
Soundtrack
See the Donnie Darko soundtrack.
Quotes
- Elizabeth [at the dinner table]: I'm voting for Dukakis.
- Kitty [to Donnie's Mother]: Rose! Sometimes I doubt your commitment to Sparkle Motion!
- Donnie: Why do you wear that stupid bunny suit?
Frank: Why are you wearing that stupid man suit?
- Principal Cole: Now let’s go over this again. So what exactly did you say to Mrs. Farmer?
Kitty Farmer: I’ll tell you what he said, he asked me to forcibly insert the lifeline exercise card into my anus!
- Gretchen: What if you could go back in time, and take all those hours of pain and darkness and replace them with something better?
- Karen Pomeroy: I don’t think you have a clue what it's like to communicate with these kids. We are losing them to apathy and this prescribed nonsense. They are slipping away.
- Donnie [to Cunningham]: You're right actually, I am pretty troubled and I am pretty confused and I'm afraid, really, really afraid, but I think you're the fucking anti-christ. [applause]
- Donnie: You're such a fuck-ass.
Elizabeth:(laughing) What? Did you just call me a fuck-ass? You can just go suck a fuck!
Donnie: Please tell me Elizabeth, how exactly does one suck a fuck?
Elizabeth: You want me to tell you?
Donnie: Please, tell me
Rose Darko: We will not have THIS at the dinner table.
Donnie: I'm all ears.
(Pause)
Samantha: What's a fuck-ass?
- Frank: Burn it to the ground.
- Dr. Thurman: Donnie is experiencing what is commonly called a daylight hallucination.
- Dr. Thurman: Has he ever told you about his friend Frank?
Rose Darko: Frank?
Dr. Thurman: Yes. The giant bunny rabbit.
Eddie Darko: The what?
- Karen Pomeroy: This famous linguist once said that of all the phrases in the English Language... of all the endless combinations of words in history, that "cellar door" was the most beautiful.
Donnie: ...cellar door...
- Frank: Twenty eight days, six hours, forty two minutes, twelve seconds...that is when the world will end...
Donnie: ...why?
- Frank: Wake up, Donnie... I've been watching you... Come closer... closer... closer...
- Donnie: So why'd you move here?
Gretchen: My parents got divorced, my mom had to get a restraining order against my dad, he has emotional problems.
Donnie: Hey, I have those too! What kind of emotional problems does your dad have?
Gretchen: He stabbed my mom four times in the chest.
- Grandma Death (Roberta Sparrow): Every living creature on this earth dies alone.
- Donnie: What's the point of living... if you don't have a dick?
- Donnie: Do you want your sister to lose weight? Tell her to get off the couch, stop eating Twinkies and maybe go out for field hockey!
Reception
Template:Advert Audiences and critics both agree Donnie Darko is a film that cannot be fully grasped in just one viewing, making it a perfect sleeper hit while explaining its flop at the box office. In fact, the film only made a box office total of around $500,000 (but part of this may be explained by the fact that it was pulled from theaters in the U.S. because of scenes that might resemble events of 9/11), although its director's cut grossed an additional $750,000. <ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?page=releases&id=donniedarko.htm | title = Donnie Darko | publisher = Box Office Mojo | accessdate = 2006-03-08 }}</ref>
Donnie Darko has occasionally been attacked for encouraging and romanticizing suicide and schizophrenia. Template:Needs citation Fans often respond that this misses the point, and looks at the film from exactly the shallow level of thought it is trying to combat. Template:Needs citation
Awards and nominations
2001 — Richard Kelly's Donnie Darko script took "Best Screenplay" honors from the Catalonian International Film Festival and the San Diego Film Critics Society. Donnie Darko also won the "Audience Award" for Best Feature at the Sweden Fantastic Film Festival. The film was nominated for "Best Film" at the Catalonian International Film Festival and for the "Grand Jury Prize" at the Sundance Film Festival.
2002 — Donnie Darko won the "Special Award" at the Young Filmmakers Showcase at the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films. The movie also won the "Silver Scream Award" at the Amsterdam Fantastic Film Festival. At the 2002 Independent Spirit Awards, Kelly was nominated in the "Best First Feature" and "Best First Screenplay" categories for Donnie Darko and Jake Gyllenhaal was nominated for "Best Male Lead". The film was also nominated for "Best Breakthrough Film" by the Online Film Critics Society.
2003 — Jake Gyllenhaal won "Best Actor" and Richard Kelly won "Best Original Screenplay" for Donnie Darko at the Chlotrudis Awards, where Kelly was also nominated for "Best Director" and "Best Movie."
2005 — Donnie Darko ranks among the top five films on Australian Broadcasting Corporation's The Movie Show.
Trivia
- The Aero Theatre where Donnie and Gretchen watch The Evil Dead is a real movie theater in Santa Monica, California.
- The Aero Theatre was also the site of an in-person Brokeback Mountain screening on February 13 2006 with Jake Gyllenhaal, co-stars Heath Ledger and Michelle Williams, screenwriter Diana Ossana, composer Gustavo Santaolalla, and cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto in attendance (director Ang Lee was detained by a blizzard on the East Coast). <ref>{{cite web
| url=http://www.defamer.com/hollywood/brokeback-mountain/defamer-screening-report-brokeback-mountain-q-a-154842.php#more | title = Defamer Screening Report: 'Brokeback Mountain' Q & A | publisher = Defamer website | accessdate = 2006-04-12 }}</ref> During the discussion that followed, Gyllenhaal described the whole experience as "surreal." Template:Needs citation
- When Donnie’s mother calls to say she’s catching the red-eye flight back, the airport announcement in the background says “Flight 2806 is boarding at gate 42 and leaving at 12 a.m.” This is a reference to the countdown, 28:06:42:12, Frank reveals.
- In Kelly’s commentary he reveals that the man in the red jogging suit is an FAA agent monitoring the family members.
- The movie was shot in 28 days, the same amount of time Donnie had to save the universe.
- Rabbits are a recurring motif, appearing as props or parts of props in many different scenes scattered throughout the movie.
- The movie was filmed in part at Loyola High School, a real-life prominent Catholic institution located in Los Angeles, California. It is one of only 55 Jesuit secondary schools throughout the United States.
- Graham Greene, whose short story The Destructors is cited in the film, was born on October 2, a date of significance in the film.
- In the director's commentary, director Richard Kelly says he was startled when Jake Gyllenhaal told him that he was channeling the director's personality to play the part of Donnie. Kelly's speaking mannerisms, in fact, do sound similar to the way Gyllenhaal delivers his lines.
- In the commentary, Kelly said he has been asked repeatedly to write a complete version of the movie's time travel book for actual publication. He has refused.
- Noah Wyle and Mary McDonnell previously worked together on televison series ER as son and mother.
Advertising
In the commentary, Kelly explains that he intentionally uses a modern Blockbuster card on the key chain for endorsement purposes.
References
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External links
- General:
- {{{2|{{{title|Donnie Darko}}}}}} at The Internet Movie Database
- DonnieDarko.com - official film website, with the director's cut trailer.
- Soundtrack:
- AllMusic.com - soundtrack album page.
- Everloving.com - how Michael Andrews and Gary Jules became involved with Donnie Darko.
- The Director's Cut:
- NewmarketFilms.com - a review from the Seattle Post of the director's cut, dated Wednesday, June 2, 2004.
- DVDTimes.co.uk - differences between the original cut and the director's cut.
- Apple.com - trailer for the director's cut.
- Reviews:
- Template:Rotten-tomatoes
- Template:Rotten-tomatoes
- Roger Ebert's review of Donnie Darko on rogerebert.com
- Roger Ebert's review of Donnie Darko: The Director's Cut on rogerebert.com
- Jim Emerson's analysis of Donnie Darko on rogerebert.com: "Donnie Darko in his mind's eye (One little boy, one little man)"
- Other:
- TheMovieGoer.com - the most comprehensive FAQ online
- StainlessSteelRat.net - frequently asked questions and dictated script.
- Cellar Door - excellent guide, include original copy of Philosophy of Time Travel and solution to donniedarko.com game.
- LocusMag.com - Extensive analysis of the movie by Lawrence Person.
- Salon.com - "Everything You Were Afraid to Ask About Donnie Darko" (membership required; alternate version here.).
- TrendWatcher.com - tracking the prominence of Donnie Darko on the internet since August, 2004.
- Script-O-Rama.com - shooting script.
- Filming Locations
- Donnie Darko: The Unofficial Novelization - An unofficial fan novelization.de:Donnie Darko
es:Donnie Darko fr:Donnie Darko it:Donnie Darko he:דוני דארקו ja:ドニー・ダーコ nl:Donnie Darko no:Donnie Darko pl:Donnie Darko pt:Donnie Darko sv:Donnie Darko