by New Line Home Video
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 6647 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $3.00 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Director: | Alejandro Amenábar |
| Release Date: | 2005-05-17 |
| Label: | New Line Home Video |
| UPC: | 794043784026 |
| Binding: | DVD |
| Published By: | New Line Home Video |
| ASIN: | B00080Z53O |
| Category: | DVD |
Actors and Actresses
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Description
Academy Award nominee Javier Bardem (Before Night Falls) delivers a powerful and sensitive portrayal of a quadriplegic who fights to win the right to end his life with dignity. Based on a true story.
DVD Features:Audio Commentary:Director CommentaryDeleted Scenes:Documentaries:"A trip to The Sea Inside" Making-ofStoryboards:Theatrical Trailer:
Amazon.com
Winner of the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film of 2004, The Sea Inside is a life-affirming film about a man who wishes to die. That may seem like a massive contradiction, but in the hands of director Alejandro Amenábar (Open Your Eyes, The Others) and actor Javier Bardem (Before Night Falls), this fact-based Spanish drama concerns the final days of Ramón Sampedro, the quadriplegic poet who waged a controversial campaign for his right to die. He was denied this right for 30 years, and ultimately arranged for his own assisted suicide, but this remarkable film--and Bardem's keenly intelligent performance--examines the hotly-debated issue of assisted suicide with admirable depth and humanity, just as Sampedro did until his death in 1998. For Sampedro, death was preferable to severe paralysis (he even refused to use a wheelchair), but the film does not suggest a "disposable" attitude toward disability. Instead, it's a thoughtful meditation on life and love as gifts to be cherished, and a challenging drama that begs each viewer to examine their own personal beliefs about what makes life worth living. You may not agree with Sampedro and his ultimate denial of life, but The Sea Inside will urge you to ponder how you would react under similar circumstances, and that makes it a profoundly meaningful film. --Jeff Shannon
Customer Reviews
Simply the best... - Reviewed on 2008-05-23
This is a true story of a 55 year old Spanish man who is a bedridden quadriplegic. Ramon Sampedro, the former ship mechanic, was paralyzed from the neck down after a swimming mishap. After being bedridden for more than 30 years, he is determined to end his life and "die with dignity." His brother, sister-in-law, nephew and father care for him. Ramon struggles in being a burden and being helpless while his family copes with the daily grind of caring for him and dealing with his death wish.
Ramon develops relationships with two women who fall in love with him - one has a terminal illness and the other is a factory worker. Both play key supporting roles in developing Ramon's character and the story line. Javier Bardem, who plays Ramon, is witty, intelligent, charming, sympathetic and an unforgettable figure - and perhaps here lies the irony for this character who is looking to end his life.
Euthanasia is a tough topic no matter which side you are on. Yet, the story is both moving and balanced - the acting (esp. Javier Bardem playing Ramon) deserved the numerous awards and widespread recognition - and the cinematography (countryside, the sea, the rustic farmhouse) was spectacular. It's hard to imagine that there is a "feel good" movie about euthanasia, terminal illnesses and the severely handicapped - however this certainly makes the grade. I found this to be one of the best movies that I have ever seen.
Interesting, and hard to rate. - Reviewed on 2008-03-10
The Sea Inside (Alejandro Amenabar, 2004)
When you know how the story ends, and you still can't believe the director is going to end up there, that's a sign of one of two things-- either the director has the message chip on his shoulder in a big way, or the director is very, very good at what he does. I suspect, where The Sea Inside is concerned, there's some of both going on here.
Amenabar (The Others) gives us the (true) story of Ramon Sampedro (Javier Bardem, Spain's greatest export), injured in a diving accident twenty-five years before and paralyzed from the neck down since, who wants only one thing: the right to end his own life without anyone getting arrested for it. Arrayed against him are, well, all the usual suspects: his family, the church, the government. Added to this is a new friend of his, a disc jockey named Rosa (Volver's Lola Duenas) who saw him on TV and has added her voice to the chorus against him. As Ramon and Rosa get to know each other better, his longtime lawyer Julia (The Orphanage's Belen Rueda) starts getting jealous.
It's impossible to discuss the implications of this movie in detail without spoilers; I'll try to avoid them by saying it seemed to me that, perhaps, Amenabar himself was less than satisfied with the way the case actually turned out, and leave it at that (any examples would constitute spoilers). This cast something of a pall over the movie for me, despite all the many things going in its favor. Javier Bardem is, of course, an incredible actor, and just about anything he does is well worth your time. The interactions between Bardem, Duenas, and Rueda, in their various combinations, are fascinating, and if much of the rest of the film had been trimmed away, they would still make for an excellent piece of cinema. Not that I mean to imply, though I guess I have, that the love-triangle aspect of the movie is of any prominence (or, for that matter, much importance) in the greater scheme of things; it's a grace note at best in the midst of a symphony. But this is, perhaps, why I have been letting this film simmer in my head for almost a month without writing a review of it until now; so many of the things about which I wanted to see more were in the background, while my original reason for wanting to see the film (which, for once, wasn't Javier Bardem; I consider Ramon Sampedro a hero, despite the ultimate futility of his crusade), which did take center stage, seemed to pale in comparison.
A good film, but a tough one to rate. It's one of those rare movies that manages to be very good and yet still show plainly that it could have been so much more. *** ½
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Book Subjects
- Adult Language
- Adult Situations
- Biopic [feature]
- Color
- Drama
- Earnest
- Feature
- Fighting the System
- Foreign Film - Spanish/Misc Sa
- Foreign Film [Dub Or Subtitle]
- Foreign Video - Spanish/Misc. SA
- Living With Disability
- Meditative
- Message Movie
- Movie
- Not For Children
- Poignant
- Psychological Drama
- Spain
- Spanish