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The Darwin Awards

 
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The Darwin Awards

  • Director: Finn Taylor
  • Genre: Comedy
  • Movie Type: Black Comedy, Road Movie
  • Themes: Star Detectives
  • Main Cast: Joseph Fiennes, Winona Ryder, Tim Blake Nelson, Wilmer Valderrama, David Arquette
  • Release Year: 2006
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 94 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

When a San Francisco homicide detective with a keen eye for criminal profiling is fired for botching the arrest of a notorious serial killer, his subsequent effort to reinvent himself as an insurance claims case-investigator leads him to study a series of perplexing wrongful deaths in this comedy starring Joseph Fiennes, Winona Ryder, Tim Blake Nelson, and Wilmer Valderrama. Michael Burrows (Fiennes) isn't your typical detective. Though Detective Burrows is a paranoid obsessive-compulsive who faints at the sight of blood, his remarkable insight into the criminal mindset has nevertheless made him a valuable asset to the San Francisco Police Department. When Detective Burrows' idiosyncrasies allow the feared "North Beach Killer" to elude capture, however, he is fired by his superiors. Upon offering his unique skills to a doubting insurance company, Burrows is given 30 days in which to prove he can sort out the legitimate claims from the false ones. Now, as Burrows makes for the Midwest in the company of hard-nosed field agent Siri Tyler (Ryder), the film student (Valderrama) who has been following the former detective for his thesis follows the pair as they investigate a series of forehead-slapping deaths, including that of a powerful executive who attempts to prove that his high-rise window is unbreakable and a pair of English tourists who fatally misinterpret the "cruise control" function on their rented RV. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Cast

Ty Burrell; Josh Charles; Kevin Dunn; Nora Dunn; Judah Friedlander; Lukas Haas; Tom Hollander; Brad Hunt; Juliette Lewis; Julianna Margulies; Alessandro Nivola; Chris Penn; Max Perlich; D.B. Sweeney; Robin Tunney; Tom Wright; Adonal Foyle; Jamie Hyneman; Adam Savage; Richmond Arquette; Mick Breitenstein; Josh Kornbluth; Jerry Harrison; John Doe; Lawrence Ferlinghetti; Metallica; Ross Patterson

Credit

Don Day - Art Director, Frank Capra III - Co-producer, Debbie Brubaker - Co-producer, Amy Brownson - Costume Designer, Frank Capra III - First Assistant Director, Frank Eulner - First Assistant Director, Finn Taylor - Director, Dick Ziker - Second Unit Director, Joseph Middleton - Second Unit Director, Rick LeCompte - Editor, Steven Siebert - Executive Producer, Charles Hsiao - Executive Producer, Laurie A. Miller - Executive Producer, David Kitay - Composer (Music Score), Charles Raggio - Musical Direction/Supervision, Peter Jamison - Production Designer, Hiro Narita - Cinematographer, Jason Blum - Producer, Johnny Wow - Producer, Jane Sindell - Producer, Christopher Boyes - Sound/Sound Designer, Finn Taylor - Screenwriter, Marjolaine Tremblay-Silva - Visual Effects Supervisor, Elizabeth Covell - Set Decorator, Andy Mayson - Co-Executive Producer, Peter Naish - Co-Executive Producer

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The Darwin Awards

Promotional poster for The Darwin Awards
Directed by Finn Taylor
Produced by Jason Blum
Debbie Brubaker
Dieter Busch
Frank Capra III
Charles Hsiao
Laurie Miller
Peter Naish
Steven Siebert
Jane Sindell
Johnny Wow
Written by Finn Taylor
Starring Joseph Fiennes
Winona Ryder
David Arquette
Juliette Lewis
Wilmer Valderrama
Chris Penn
Julianna Margulies
Robin Tunney
Brad Hunt
Josh Charles
Judah Friedlander
Lukas Haas
D.B. Sweeney
Music by David Kitay
Cinematography Hiro Narita
Editing by Rick LeCompte
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) January 25, 2006 (Sundance)
Running time 93 min.
Language English

The Darwin Awards is a comedy film based on the website of the same name.

Written and directed by Finn Taylor, the film premiered January 25, 2006, at the Sundance Film Festival. The film features Joseph Fiennes, Winona Ryder, David Arquette, Juliette Lewis, Wilmer Valderrama, Chris Penn, Julianna Margulies, Robin Tunney, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Brad Hunt, Adam Savage, Jamie Hyneman and Metallica. This was Chris Penn's last movie before his death on January 24, 2006, the day before the movie's premiere. The film includes several full and partial re-enactments of "Darwin Awards", most of which are actually urban legends, most notably the debunked JATO Rocket Car story.

Joseph Fiennes in The Darwin Awards

Contents

Plot

The movie opens with a shot of a man in a car with a JATO rocket strapped to it. The relevance of the opening is not explained for some time as the movie shifts gears to a detailed look into the life of Michael Burrows, a criminal profiler for the San Francisco Police Department. Much of the film is shot in a documentary style, ostensibly as a part of a dissertation by a film school grad that follows Michael through the movie. Fired from the force after his hemophobia lets a serial killer get away, he drifts about in a deep depression for several weeks before coming up with a way to combine his obsession with the Darwin Awards with his talent for profiling: Help insurance companies detect people that are likely to accidentally end their own lives before they are sold insurance policies. After impressing a manager at the insurance company with his talent for profiling, he's paired up with Siri, a specialist in strange insurance cases.

Siri and Michael travel the country investigating several legendary examples of stupidity on behalf of the insurance company, such as the above mentioned JATO rocket car, not all of which would qualify as 'Darwin Awards'. For example, a pair of men who are attempting to ice fish get frustrated and try to use a stick of dynamite to blast a hole in the ice only to have their trusty dog fetch the stick of dynamite, run back to their brand-new SUV, and sink it to the bottom of the lake without either man being killed. As they investigate those and other cases, Michael tries to find a common factor in these people; the closest the movie gets to an explanation is a confused monologue by Siri about insurance companies always denying claims and driving people insane.

Ironically, Michael narrowly avoids becoming a Darwin Award winner throughout the movie. In one instance, he and Siri are stranded out in the middle of nowhere on a cold winter night. Desperate for warmth, he attempts to set a fire with gasoline to get warm only to blow up his own car. In a later scene, Siri confronts Michael, accusing him of being so obsessed with the Darwin Award winners because he suspects he is one of them.

A twist of fate leads to Michael finding out where the murder suspect he let get away lives. As he attempts to videotape the man in his home by rappelling down the side of his building, the film school student is seen for the first time. He, too, is hanging on the side of the building by a rope- with the other end of the same rope Michael is dangling by. The stone vase the pair is anchored by inches closer to the edge as the serial killer taunts them from the roof, slicing open Siri's hand in an effort to trigger Michael's hemophobia. Michael is able to overcome his hemophobia, defeat the serial killer, and live happily ever after with Siri.

Reception

The movie was disliked by critics, and has only a 25 percent "fresh" rating on RottenTomatoes.com.[1] Critics typically complained that the movie was formulaic and not funny.

External links

References

  1. ^ RottenTomatoes.com page for The Darwin Awards

 
 

 

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