by New Line Home Video
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 11608 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $2.92 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Director: | Greg Marcks |
| Release Date: | 2005-10-11 |
| Label: | New Line Home Video |
| UPC: | 794043838927 |
| Binding: | DVD |
| Published By: | New Line Home Video |
| ASIN: | B000ALM40I |
| Category: | DVD |
Actors and Actresses
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Description
Tells the seemingly random yet vitally connected story of a set of incidents that all converge one evening at 11:14pm. The lives of many cross at this one point in time which shall have life-altering effects.
DVD Features:
Audio Commentary:Filmmaker Commentary with Director Greg Marcks
Deleted Scenes
Featurette:46 Minutes to Midnite
Theatrical Trailer
Amazon.com
How is it possible that 11:14 went virtually unreleased in theaters? After modest film-festival exposure, it played briefly in San Francisco in August 2005 (over two years after it was completed), but that's a cruel twist of fate for such a cleverly twisted movie about cruel twists of fate. Destined for sleeper status on DVD (and given a slightly higher profile by Hilary Swank's subsequent Oscar-winning performance in Million Dollar Baby), the audacious debut of writer-director Greg Marcks boasts a fantastic cast in a smartly constructed comedy/thriller, partly inspired by Blood Simple, in which a fatal traffic accident is examined and re-examined from multiple perspectives. The flashback structure involves all of the characters and events that lead up to the accident's deadly occurrence at 11:14 on an otherwise pleasant evening in Middleton, a typical suburb of Anytown, USA (filmed in the vicinity of Los Angeles). Marcks's screenplay attracted an impressive ensemble cast (costar Swank also signed on as an executive producer), and they're all given equal time as the intertwined plots are revealed. They include Rachael Leigh Cook (whose bad-girl behavior sets the chain of events in motion); Patrick Swayze and Barbara Hershey as her worried parents; Swank and Shawn Hatosy as would-be criminals with a dimwit plan; Henry Thomas as a drunk driver whose involvement is deeper than we realize; and Colin Hanks as one of three teenage vandals on a fast track to trouble. With falling corpses, graveyard sex, reckless gunplay, and a severed penis, it's all in good, grisly fun (apart from intricate plotting, Marcks has no lofty agenda up his sleeve), and there's ultimately not much point to its random misfortune, but 11:14 is clearly the work of a promising filmmaker, worthy of rediscovery on DVD. Bonus features include Marcks's intelligent commentary, a standard behind-the-scenes featurette, and a useful "character jump" feature allowing viewers to choose a plot trajectory whenever one character encounters another. --Jeff Shannon
Customer Reviews
11:14 - Reviewed on 2008-12-01
I watched this rather bizarre movie not knowing what to expect. Part way through I was hooked, and by the end I thought, "wow, what a clever movie." The movie seems somewhat improbable, dead bodies falling onto cars, an employee robbing his place of employment, a guy losing his genitals, but the end result was a well directed, well acted film.
What makes this movie a challenge to watch is how it works backwards from the climactic scene. The movie thus becomes a series of vignettes that evolve around the preceeding (succeeding) event. The viewer knows when each scene ends as the camera focuses on a clock. The end result is an event that happens at 11:14 though that is really the opening scene in the film.
With less capable actors, this film may have crashed and burned, but this cast is able to work with the director to make an entertaining, if off-beat, film.
Very good film, with surprising twists and turns. - Reviewed on 2008-11-26
1 customer found this review helpful.
This was a great thriller/independent drama film that was filled with clever twists and turns and also had some nice black comedy moments to it. The acting, dialogue and action sequences are great and it's amazing how well this movie flows and how well it was put together, the film also stars Hilary Swank (who also produced), Henry Thomas, Rachael Leigh Cook, Patrick Swayze, Barbara Hershey, Ben Foster and others in a multi-storied film where all the storylines intersect at the title time. The first story runs about 5 minutes, playing in real time from around 11:10 to 11:15. It then goes back in time to follow someone else around the same time. Our first victim of circumstance is Jack (Henry Thomas). He's just finished a phone conversation when out of nowhere, a body lands on his car. Since he's been drinking he decides that it might be a good idea to hide the evidence. A passerby stops to ask what the trouble is and assumes that the driver has hit a deer in the road, but when the cop who reports to the scene and opens up the trunk, a mad chase through the woods ensues. Flash back to Frank (Patrick Swayze who was surprisingly good in this role), who's watching his daughter (Rachael Leigh Cook) leave from the window of their home. He decides to take his dog out for a walk through the cemetery. He soon discovers his daughter's keys on the ground and then runs headlong into a body, its skull crushed beyond recognition. Thinking that it was his daughter who committed the murder in self-defense, he decides to protect his daughter by getting rid of the body. There is also a hilarious subplot about three drunken teenagers who go out on a joyride and end up being in alot of trouble, and the moral of this story was don't pee out of the window of a moving car or else!. 11:14 was an extremely entertaining and well crafted film with great performances from the cast especially Hillary Swank as a not so clever store clerk and Patrick Swayze, who I'm not really a big fan but he was pretty good in this film as the overprotective father. I highly recommend this enjoyable film and two thumbs up.
Entertaining Dark Comedy, Still Hardly Groundbreaking - Reviewed on 2007-09-02
1 customer found this review not to be helpful.
Mixture of crime and comedy told with multiple viewpoints is no longer a new thing after "Pulp Fiction," but the impression of "11:14" is closer to Doug Liman's "go" (1999), of which tagline goes "Life begins at 3 am." Greg Marcks' film starts earlier, but the tone is slightly darker.
The film, which starts with one strange car accident involving a dead body falling from up above, skillfully puts together a range of different perspectives. More strange and bizarre accidents are to happen later in the film and those characters played by Hilary Swank (also co-executive producer), Henry Thomas, Blake Heron, Barbara Hershey, Clark Gregg, Shawn Hatosy, Stark Sands, Colin Hanks, Ben Foster, Patrick Swayze and Rachael Leigh Cook, make serious (and hilarious) mistakes.
Hilary Swank's convenience store clerk "Buzzy" and gunshots part is most interesting and so is the freak accident that happens to one drunken teenage boy in the van. Both episodes end up with terrible and painful results which will make the viewers laugh a lot.
But for me as the film went on, it became less and less interesting. It's like jigsaw puzzle and as the pieces are put in the right places, there are no more surprises coming from the finished parts. In Tarantino, round characters like Mia, Vincent and Jules never bored us with superb acting from Uma Thurman, John Travolta and Samuel L. Jackson all speaking the dialogues you never forget. Here some characters are disappointingly flat such as Rachael Leigh Cook's flirting daughter and Patrick Swayze's concerned father. Tarantino would have milked their scenes for more surprising jokes (like the dead body in the backseat and Harvey Keitel's cleaner episode). In "11:14" we can predict what is coming after seeing Rachael Leigh Cook's character and her boyfriend enter the graveyard.
"11:14" is an entertaining dark comedy and the director has a flair for making unique comic scenes, though it is also true that I felt I had seen them before while watching.
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Book Subjects
- Adult Humor
- Adult Situations
- Black Comedy
- Color
- Comedy Drama
- Crime Comedy
- Crime Gone Awry
- Cynical
- Drama
- English
- Ensemble Film
- Faltering Friendships
- Feature
- Feature Film-drama
- Hide the Dead Body
- Ironic
- Menacing
- Movie
- Mystery / Suspense / Thriller
- Nothing Goes Right