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The Fountain
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The Fountain (2006) More at IMDbPro »

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The Fountain (2006) -- Spanning over one thousand years, and three parallel stories, The Fountain is a story of love, death, spirituality, and the fragility of our existence in this world.
The Fountain (2006) -- Clip: Your Wife Needs You!
The Fountain (2006) -- Interview: Rachel Weisz "What Attracted Her to the Script"
The Fountain (2006) -- Spanning over one thousand years, and three parallel stories, The Fountain is a story of love, death, spirituality, and the fragility of our existence in this world.
The Fountain (2006) -- Spanning over one thousand years, and three parallel stories, The Fountain is a story of love, death, spirituality, and the fragility of our existence in this world.

Overview

User Rating:
7.5/10   65,668 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Up 18% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers (WGA):
Darren Aronofsky (screenplay)
Darren Aronofsky (story) ...
more
Contact:
View company contact information for The Fountain on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
22 November 2006 (USA) more
Genre:
Tagline:
What If You Could Live Forever? more
Plot:
Spanning over one thousand years, and three parallel stories, The Fountain is a story of love, death, spirituality, and the fragility of our existence in this world. full summary | full synopsis
Plot Keywords:
Awards:
Nominated for Golden Globe. Another 6 wins & 14 nominations more
NewsDesk:
(163 articles)
Top 50 Performances of the Decade (Male)
 (From FilmExperience. 5 January 2010, 5:01 AM, PST)

'The Lovely Bones' Not So Lovely
 (From CinemaSpy. 3 January 2010, 9:45 PM, PST)

User Reviews:
Film is an artform and Aronofsky is a Picasso more (764 total)

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)

Additional Details

Also Known As:
The Last Man (USA) (original script title)
more
MPAA:
Rated PG-13 for some intense sequences of violent action, some sensuality and language. (edited for re-rating; originally R)
Runtime:
96 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
UK:15 (original rating) | Ireland:15A | Australia:M | Switzerland:14 (canton of Vaud) | Switzerland:14 (canton of Geneva) | UK:12A (edited for re-rating) | USA:R (original rating) | Singapore:PG | France:U | Germany:12 | Hong Kong:IIA | Argentina:13 | Netherlands:16 | Sweden:11 | Finland:K-13 | Portugal:M/12 | South Korea:15 | Peru:14 | USA:PG-13 (edited for re-rating) (certificate #41776) | Brazil:14 | New Zealand:M

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
The group of stars that appear at movie is the Orion constellation, and the Xibalba Nebula is knew in astronomy jargon as Messier 42, M42, NGC 1976 or Orion Nebula, located at 1270 light-years approximately from the Earth. more
Goofs:
Errors in geography: The map used by the conquistadors to find the Tree of Life is erroneous. The priest says the three points which form an equilateral triangle on the map are Chichen Itza, Yaxchilan, and Tikal. However in reality, the three Mayan sites form an obtuse triangle, with Chichen Itza been the northern-most and the eastern-most point. more
Quotes:
Izzi: [as a vision of Izzi in 2500] Finish it.
Tom Creo: Stop... Stop it!
[he rises from beside the tree and marches to her]
Tom Creo: What do you want? Leave me, leave me alone! Please, please... It's not my...
[kneels and breaks into sobs]
Izzi: [she touches his head with a robed arm; he looks up and sees Queen Isabella, smiles, and stands] Will you deliver Spain from bondage?
Tom Creo: I don't know... I'm trying, trying... I don't know how.
Izzi: You do. You will.
[cut to Tom, then cut to Izzi]
Izzi: You do... You will.
[...]
more
Movie Connections:
References Ikiru (1952) more

FAQ

Is the future story real?
Is Tom the Last Man?
What's the main concept behind the film? Are their other themes?
more
193 out of 317 people found the following review useful.
Film is an artform and Aronofsky is a Picasso, 24 November 2006
7/10
Author: Flagrant-Baronessa from the kingdom of far, far away (Sweden)

How very sad it is when a great film is spoiled by an ending that simply isn't in-tune. Darren Aronofsky received the Visionary Award 2006 at the Stockholm Film Festival where I watched 'The Fountain', which should serve as a mark of his momentous, earth-shatteringly beautiful visions in breathing life into a universe dependent on the delicate cycle of life and death. It is not until the ending, however, that the film abandons all other components and overdoses on the latter.

But first let me recap the dizzying storyline. The Fountain spans across 1000 years of time, opening in the gritty dark jungles of the Mayan civilization, cutting to present day America and ending in a golden bubble in space (no, really). These three parallel stories are sewn together by Tom's (Hugh Jackman) odyssey to save the woman he loves (Rachel Weisz) from cancer. In many ways, the present-day story is the film's central element and the other dimensions the mere windowdressing, and arguably fantasies from the book Izzi is writing. Nevertheless, the latter are among the most absorbing, especially the grueling trials of the Spanish inquisition in the 1500s.

It is no wonder the aforementioned plot is so whacked-out because Darren Aronofsky means that 'The Fountain' should not be analyzed as a story, but enjoyed as an experience. To facilitate this experience he embellishes with lush iconic stills by the bucketload, often in the form of aerial shots from the ceiling looking down at its characters. There is in this way a dramatic symmetry in the buildings, arches and scenery. You truly just want to snap a picture of each scene, frame it and hang it on your wall. The colours are unspeakably vivid and the vast visions form a world unto itself – an indescribable experience that welcomes you into dreamy dimensions and takes and shakes you. My audience sat speechless and tear-eyed.

It is true that The Fountain is mostly cinematography (a kind of 2001), but it is no "vacuous" film. For one, it is emotionally compelling not only owing to its visuals but also its cast. Tom/Tommy/Tomas is a demanding role for Hugh Jackman to inhibit, but he captures the struggle of his character aptly. Rachel Weisz, too, is appropriately emotive and likable in the story. Togethery they have bubbling chemistry that creates mesmerizing magic, although with splashes of melodrama. The latter can best be attributed to the faltering dialogue that sometimes contains more corn than Kellogg's. This shortcoming is however far from a fatal one (since the film is anything but dialogue-driven) and between the meaningful glances, the expert navigation of the parallel dreamworlds and the epic score, The Fountain stays afloat with assured direction.

Until the end, that is. Here the dreaded hubris kicks in and Aronofsky realises he has already gone down all kinds of ambitious paths in the film, and compensates by applying the 'big, bigger, epic' formula. There is, in all fairness, no perfect way to sew The Fountain together because it has been so out there for so long. I will not spoil the ending sequence for you, mostly because all I can remember is a vague blur of explosive golden crescendo. The fine line between poignant and over-the-top corny along which the film has treated throughout suddenly shakes and The Fountain tips over into... simply too much of everything, completely overdosing on furious flair.

In conclusion it must be said that I truly do think that Aronofsky has created something unspeakably beautiful here. The Visionary Award is perfectly earned and cements his position as one of the most interesting new directors. Aronofsky cites Werner Herzog's "Aguirre, the Wrath of God" and Sergio Leone's "Once Upon a Time in America" as key influences for The Fountain and indeed much of the former is present in his film. Watch it and absorb the lush cinematography and explicit emotions – don't dissect the story.

7 out of 10

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