Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Spun

 
Movies:

Spun

  • Director: Jonas Åkerlund
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Black Comedy
  • Themes: Nothing Goes Right, Drug Trade, Drug Addiction
  • Main Cast: Jason Schwartzman, John Leguizamo, Mena Suvari, Patrick Fugit, Brittany Murphy, Mickey Rourke
  • Release Year: 2002
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 101 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: NR

Plot

A crystal-meth addict struggles to get his next fix as he obsesses over a recent breakup in Spun, a black-comic drug drama from music video director Jonas Akerlund. Rushmore's Jason Schwartzman stars as Ross, a young man who finds his maniacal world crumbling around him over the course of one long weekend. Spun chronicles Ross' travails as he tries to score from his regular dealer, Spider Mike (John Leguizamo), who realizes during Ross' visit that he's misplaced his stash. Indisposed by the frantic drug search, Spider Mike's girlfriend, Cookie (Mena Suvari), enlists Ross to pick up her stripper friend Nikki (Brittany Murphy) from work, and when he grudgingly agrees, he learns that Nikki might have an inside line on some of her own speed, courtesy of The Cook (Mickey Rourke). Meanwhile, two bumbling cops are onto Spider Mike's trail, and in his paranoid-delusional state, he sets out to find out who set him up. Spun premiered at the 2002 CineVegas Film Festival before securing berths at the Sundance, Toronto, and South by Southwest festivals. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide

Review

Cult films are born, not made, and director Jonas Akerlund practices a not-so-blissful ignorance of this fact with Spun, a strenuously "extreme" addition to the amoral-hipsters-on-drugs genre. Boasting a cast of young, talented actors desperate to shake their boy- (or girl-) next-door images, Spun works so hard to be flip and arrogant, it doesn't even realize how square and sentimental it really is. Casting perennial nice guy Jason Schwartzman in the lead doesn't help: Though Akerlund ratchets up the "edginess" factor by showing him duct-tape a stripper's eyes and mouth shut, subsequent scenes revolve around his character's trite attempts at reconciliation with his ex-girlfriend, underscored by lots of would-be soulful brooding and Billy Corgan's plaintive acoustic score. Scenes with the ironically cast supporting actors (Debbie Harry, Mickey Rourke, and Eric Roberts among them) play like outtakes, with Akerlund indulging his performers' worst habits in tic-laden, over-edited sequences that last far longer than they should. It's as if the cast of MTV's The Real World was assigned to remake an Andy Warhol movie. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide

Cast

Peter Stormare - Cop #1; Alexis Arquette - Cop #2; Deborah Harry - The Lesbian Neighbor; Eric Roberts - The Man; Chloe Hunter - April; Julia Mendoza - L. A. Sad Girl; Elisa Bocanegra - Giggles; Josh Peck - Fat Boy; Larry Drake - Dr. K; Charlotte Ayanna - Amy; Ron Jeremy - Bartender; Tony Kaye - Emcee; Rob Halford - Porn Shop Clerk

Credit

Jason Hamilton - Art Director, Clark McCutchen - Associate Producer, Chris Fisher - Associate Producer, Renita Whited - Casting, Thierry Klemeniuk - Co-producer, Vincent Maraval - Co-producer, Alain de la Mata - Co-producer, David Hillary - Co-producer, Will De Los Santos - Co-producer, Creighton Vero - Co-producer, B. - Costume Designer, John O'Rourke - First Assistant Director, Jonas Åkerlund - Director, Leonard Palmestaal - Second Unit Director, Jonas Åkerlund - Editor, Leonard Palmestaal - Editor, Mark Boone, Jr. - Executive Producer, Ash R. Shah - Executive Producer, Bradford L. Schlei - Executive Producer, Kiki Miyake - Executive Producer, Mark Mower - Executive Producer, Nicola Doring - Executive Producer, Billy Corgan - Composer (Music Score), Richard Lassalle - Production Designer, Eric Broms - Cinematographer, Fernando Sulichin - Producer, Chris Hanley - Producer, Timothy Wayne Peternel - Producer, Danny Vinik - Producer, Lisa Tong - Set Designer, Albee Gordon - Sound/Sound Designer, David Chamaw - Sound/Sound Designer, Eric Thorsell - Sound/Sound Designer, Will De Los Santos - Screenwriter, Creighton Vero - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Bad Lieutenant; Drugstore Cowboy; Trainspotting; Gummo; Requiem for a Dream; Bully; Crank
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Spun
Top
This article is about the 2002 Film. For the Keller Williams album, see Spun (album).
Spun
Directed by Jonas Åkerlund
Produced by Danny Vinik
Chris Hanley
Written by Will De Los Santos
Creighton Vero
Starring Jason Schwartzman
Brittany Murphy
Mena Suvari
Mickey Rourke
John Leguizamo
Patrick Fugit
Music by Billy Corgan
Cinematography Eric Broms
Editing by Jonas Åkerlund
Distributed by Silver Nitrate Films
Release date(s) January, 2002
Running time 101 min.
Country  United States
Language English
Budget $2,000,000

Spun is a 2002 independent movie directed by Jonas Åkerlund. This is Åkerlund's début as a film director after being better known for his work on music videos. The film was shot in 22 days.

Contents

Overview

The film’s title is a reference to the slang term for the way users feel after going multiple days without sleep while on a methamphetamine binge.

The film includes appearances from Rob Halford, Billy Corgan, China Chow, Tony Kaye, Ron Jeremy, Deborah Harry, and Josh Peck.

Plot

Ross (Jason Schwartzman) is a customer of Spider Mike (John Leguizamo), a methamphetamine dealer. Spider Mike and his girlfriend Cookie (Mena Suvari) are constantly arguing, and Ross strikes up a friendship with Nikki (Brittany Murphy), a fellow addict. Nikki takes Ross to "The Cook" (Mickey Rourke), who supplies Spider Mike with drugs from a meth lab he has set up in a motel room. The Cook gives a small amount of meth to Ross in exchange for bringing Nikki (his girlfriend) home, and says that he will get in touch with Ross if he needs a driver.

Back at his apartment, Ross gets messages from his mother and his former girlfriend Amy, wishing him a happy birthday; Amy is also demanding that he pay back the money he owes her. Ross, assuming she still loves him, calls her and leaves a message. He then goes to the local strip club while high, leading to an intense pornographic hallucination. He takes one of the dancers, April, home and has sex with her. As they finish, the Cook calls with an emergency regarding Nikki's dog. Ross, still high, leaves April handcuffed and tied to the bed and duct-tapes her eyes and mouth shut to keep her quiet.

While Ross and Nikki take the dog to the veterinarian, policemen and a TV crew raid the trailer where Frisbee lives, falsely believing that a meth lab is located there. They take Frisbee and his overweight mother into custody, where they threaten him into cooperation in a drug bust.

The same day, Ross and the Cook stop by a local gas station to pick up a case of ephedrine- pills and a soda. Next they go to a liquor store to purchase a six-pack of beer. They then visit an adult film store, where the Cook preaches about the values of pornography in America. Ross calls Amy's house again, but to no avail. He drops the Cook off at his place and rushes home to April, who is still tied to the bed. She appears to forgive him, and they proceed to have more sex.

In the Cook's motel room, he and Nikki have a fight after a prostitute arrives. Nikki ends their relationship, and calls Ross and asks him to take her to a bus station so she can go back to Las Vegas. Ross leaves April again, who is still tied to the bed; she is subsequently rescued by Ross' lesbian neighbor (Debbie Harry).

While Ross and Nikki are out, Frisbee is coerced by the cops to wear a wire and make a deal with Spider Mike so they can arrest him. When he enters, Cookie attempts to make love to him, her revenge on Spider Mike for his usage of a phone sex line. She finds the wire, and the cops rush in to make the drug bust. Spider Mike, furious at Frisbee's betrayal, shoots him in the testicles, and Spider Mike and Cookie are arrested.

While this is happening, the Cook's meth lab catches fire and destroys the motel room. He takes off to the adult film store, where he is arrested after the owner (Rob Halford) calls the police. Once the Cook makes bail, he calls Ross asking for a ride to another dealer's house in the city after he drops Nikki off at the station. Ross learns of everyone else's arrests, and agrees to drive him there, as well as visit Amy, who also lives in the city.

The dealer (Eric Roberts) provides the Cook with cash, some meth, and the equipment to start a new meth lab. Ross calls Amy again, and leaves a message asking to see her and that he has her money with him. The Cook promises six months' worth of meth to Ross in exchange for being his chauffeur; he agrees on the condition that he can see Amy first. Amy, who has gotten her life together and found work in the city, leaves him in the park after seeing that he is still an addict. He gives her $100 of the money he owes her, and leaves with the Cook.

Finally, after several days of nonstop activity fueled by drug use, the main characters all go to sleep except for the Cook. As Ross naps in his car, the Cook starts up a new lab in an old trailer, but blows it and himself up in the process.

Reception

The film got mixed reactions, with some analysts remarking that the film added nothing new to the genre of drug movies. Time Out London was particularly harsh, accusing the film of "smug amoralism", and claiming that Åkerlund simply re-uses other people's ideas and techniques.[1]
Roger Ebert was more empathetic in his review, where he described the film as having "effortless wickedness". His main appraisal is the fact that the film in no way attempts to romanticise any of the characters. He does, however, explicitly mention the similarities between this and the earlier Requiem for a Dream.[2]

This comparison may not have been lost on the filmmakers. The title on a pornographic tape purchased by a character reads "Rectum for a dream", and the scenes which show consumption of the drug also show its constricting effect on the pupils in fast cutscenes.

Soundtrack

The original music for Spun was written by Billy Corgan. The soundtrack to the film features songs by artists such as Iron Maiden, Ozzy Osbourne, Mötley Crüe, Blues Traveler, Bathory, Richie Havens, Phantom Planet, and Satyricon, whose video for the song "Mother North" appears in the movie.

Cast

Production crew

References

External links


Shopping: Spun
Top
 
 
Learn More
as-spun (textiles)
carding machine (textiles)
cellulose acetate rayon (textiles)

If a motor is spun will it create electricity? Read answer...
How is cotton spun into a fabric? Read answer...
Can straw be spun into gold? Read answer...

Help us answer these
How is cotton spun?
What is bone spun?
What is ring spun?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Spun" Read more