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The Fountain

 
Movies:

The Fountain

  • Director: Darren Aronofsky
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Psychological Sci-Fi, Romantic Drama
  • Themes: Immortality, Death of a Partner, Dying Young
  • Main Cast: Hugh Jackman, Rachel Weisz, Ellen Burstyn, Mark Margolis, Stephen McHattie
  • Release Year: 2006
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 95 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Requiem for a Dream director Darren Aronofsky switches gears from drug-induced urban malaise to abstract science fiction with this time-tripping symbolic tale of a man's thousand-year quest to save the woman he loves. Moving between representational stories and images, this meditation on life and death focuses on the concept of the mythical Tree of Life that is said to bestow immortality to all who drink of its sap. In one of the film's allegorical timelines, a 16th century Spanish conquistador played by Hugh Jackman sets out to find the tree in order to save his queen (Rachel Weisz) from the Inquisition. Another conceptual story finds Jackman centuries later, struggling with mortality as a modern-day scientist desperately searching for the medical breakthrough that will save the life of his cancer-stricken wife, Izzi. The third and most abstract concept finds Jackman as a different incarnation of the same character-idea, this time questing for eternal life within the confines of a floating sphere transporting the aged Tree of Life through the depths of space. Still more avant-garde than his breakthrough film Pi, The Fountain finds Aronofsky almost completely abandoning conventional story structure in favor of something more cinematically abstract. Though the film was originally slapped with an R by the MPAA, Aronofsky & co. re-edited it to conform to a PG-13 rating. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Review

It should go without saying but it seldom does: people who don't like abstract art shouldn't see non-narrative films. The Fountain is a beautiful and triumphant success as an impressionistic take on the circular nature of life, love, and human frailty, but its achievements may be lost on moviegoers looking for a clear story that they can follow from beginning to end. Where most movies are works of prose, The Fountain is a work of poetry, and the fundamental artistic principles that will endear it to lovers of the abstract style will probably make it tough to swallow for the mainstream crowd.

It traces the events of three "timelines" that should not be taken literally (as this would result in a nonsensical jumble), but rather as representations of the paths we may take in both terror and acceptance of death. Darren Aronofsky employs the same perspective here as he did with Pi, applying a subjectivity to the spiritual and existential answers we seek, proposing that even the most profound truths will still be shaped by the limited portal of the human mind.

Aronofsky is unapologetic in his almost singular use of symbolic material, but his choices still show that he's aware of the audience's experience. In order to keep the viewer from becoming lost in a clutter of conceptual images, he builds the film around a central story that, while still allegorical, also closely resembles a literal narrative. This part of the film is written in a more common artistic language, providing a cognitive foothold for the audience so they don't get tired of translating the more complex messages. This central story, concerning a neurological research scientist on a fanatical crusade to cure his dying wife's brain tumor, provides Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz with the chance to tap into raw cinematic alchemy, excelling both as characters and as representations.

Aronofsky's sum-total statement in The Fountain could surely fill volumes and fuel much debate, but his primary theme is clear: that while there may be no escaping death, we each still drink from the fountain of youth when we breathe our own contribution into the earth's everlasting cycle: eternal life in perennial life.

~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Fernando Hernandez - Lord of Xibalba; Cliff Curtis - Captain Ariel; Sean Patrick Thomas - Antonio; Donna Murphy - Betty; Ethan Suplee - Manny; Richard McMillan - Henry; Lorne Brass - Dr. Alan Lipper; Abraham Aronofsky - Lab Technician; Renee Asofsky - Lab Technician; Anish Majumdar - Dr. Spencer; Janique Kearns - Young Nurse; Boyd Banks - Dominican Monk; Alexandre Bisping - Foot Soldier Del Toro; Kevin Kelsall - Foot Soldier Rivera; Patricia Dal - Foot Soldier Galleano; Marcello Bezina - Foot Soldier Borjes; Hugo Salvador Gutierrez Aguilar - Mayan Warrior; Eric Carmelo Valenzuela Batz - Mayan Warrior; Elfego Vinicio Pena Castellanos - Mayan Warrior; Jose Maria Tol Chan - Mayan Warrior; Benjamin Panjoj Cortez - Mayan Warrior; Juan Salvador Lares - Mayan Warrior; Jose Alfredo Conoz Macario - Mayan Warrior; Guatemaya Chicua - Mayan Warrior; Tomas Tol Nix - Mayan Warrior; Luis Alfredo Yac Noj - Mayan Warrior; Mateo Martin Perez - Mayan Warrior; Edson Vasquez Pixabaj - Mayan Warrior; Marvin Leonardo Raxtun - Mayan Warrior; Tomas Morales Sacquic - Mayan Warrior; Santos Ajic Sapon - Mayan Warrior; Xaijil Sicajan - Mayan Warrior; Manuel Antonio Salvador Tol - Mayan Warrior; Tomas Salvador Tol - Mayan Warrior; Tomas Augustin Canil Ventura - Mayan Warrior; Carlos Enrique Ramos Xalcut - Mayan Warrior; Octavio Guadelupe Zabala - Mayan Warrior; Xitamul - Mayan Warrior; Yolanda - Donovan; Bianca Cody Murphy - Lab Support Primate; Diget - Lab Support Primate; Granny - Lab Support Primate

Credit

Isabelle Guay - Art Director, Jean-Pierre Paquet - Art Director, Michele Laliberte - Art Director, Nicholas Lepage - Art Director, Ari Handel - Associate Producer, Elizabeth Raposo - Associate Producer, Maxime Ferland - Boom Operator, Mary Vernieu - Casting, Robin D. Cook - Casting, Elfego Vinicio Pena Castellanos - Casting, Federico Fahsen - Consultant/advisor, Renee April - Costume Designer, Myron Hoffert - First Assistant Director, Emilie Malo - First Assistant Director, Darren Aronofsky - Director, Jeremy Dawson - Second Unit Director, Jay Rabinowitz - Editor, Nick Wechsler - Executive Producer, Paul LeBlanc - Hair Styles, Dow Griffith - Location Manager, Pierre Brunet - Location Manager, Christian Biron - Location Manager, Clint Mansell - Composer (Music Score), Justin Skomarovosky - Musical Arrangement, Judy Chin - Makeup, Francois Gauthier - Makeup Special Effects, Bruno Gatien - Makeup Special Effects, Jonathan Lavallée - Makeup Special Effects, Nelson Da Costa - Makeup Special Effects, Daniel Harding - Makeup Special Effects, Martin Jutras - Makeup Special Effects, Sylvania Yau - Makeup Special Effects, François Daignault - Camera Operator, James Chinlund - Production Designer, Matthew J. Libatique - Cinematographer, Arnon Milchan - Producer, Iain Smith - Producer, Darren Aronofsky - Producer, Eric Watson - Producer, Peter Dimakos Koulouris - Research, Felix Lariviere-Charron - Set Designer, Jean-Pierre Lavoie - Set Designer, Brent Lambert - Set Designer, Alex Touikan - Set Designer, Frédéric Amblard - Set Designer, Vincent Gingras-Liberali - Set Designer, Les Productions de L'intrigue - Special Effects, Patrick Rousseau - Sound Mixer, Geoff Foster - Sound Mixer, Brian Emrich - Sound/Sound Designer, Francois Gauthier - Stunts, Dwayne Wiley - Stunts, John Walsh - Stunts, Benoît Gauthier - Stunts, Alain Bérard - Stunts, Jere Gillis - Stunts, Karine Lemieux - Stunts, Patrick Kerton - Stunts, Helena Laliberté - Stunts, André Laperriere - Stunts, Stéphane Dargis - Stunts, Marc Moisan - Stunts, Javier Segura - Stunts, Marc Desourdy - Stunts Coordinator, Louis Craig - Special Effects Supervisor, Ric Nish - Unit Production Manager, Darren Aronofsky - Screen Story, Ari Handel - Screen Story, Darren Aronofsky - Screenwriter, Sylvaine Dufaux - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Julie Gratton - Production Assistant, Isabelle Beaudry - Production Assistant, Marie-Claude Bolduc - Production Assistant, Audrey Bouchard - Production Assistant, Guenael Charrier - Production Assistant, Marie-Claude Mackay - Production Assistant, Michel Parent - Production Assistant, Emilie Dutilly-Lefebvre - Production Assistant, Acia Greason - Production Assistant, Tyler Robb - Production Assistant, Henrik R. Fett - Visual Effects Supervisor, Benoit Girard - Visual Effects Supervisor, Louis Morin - Visual Effects Supervisor, Dan Schrecker - Visual Effects Supervisor, Raymond Gieringer - Visual Effects Supervisor, Laurent M. Abecassis - Visual Effects Supervisor, Jeremy Dawson - Visual Effects Supervisor, Peter Oberdorfer - Visual Effects Supervisor, Matthew Gratzner - Visual Effects Supervisor, Phil Jones - Visual Effects Supervisor, Michel Heroux - Visual Effects Supervisor, Jordan Nieuwland - Additional Music, Francois Gauthier - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Raymond Ducasse - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Pro-Films Animals - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Josee Juteau - Animal Trainer/Wrangler, Vanessa Godin - Model Effects, Ronny Gosselin - Model Effects, Simon Guilbault - Model Effects, Patrice Jacques - Model Effects, Cara Leibovitz - Unit Publicist, Cindy Langelier - Additional Editing, Warren Langford - Associate Editor, Matthew Mayer - Associate Editor, Nicolas Marion - First Assistant Camera, Yves Drapeau - First Assistant Camera, John Lewin - Gaffer, Jean-Yves Denis - Grip, Robert Lacroix - Grip, Alain Bisson-Doyal - Grip, Marcel Breton - Grip, Joost Clerinx - Grip, Éric Lamarche - Grip, Michel Périard - Key Grip, Mario Roussy - Key Grip, Stéphane Pilon - Key Grip, Nicolas Theriault - Music Editor, Mogwai - Musical Performer, Kronos Quartet - Musical Performer, Hank Dutt - Musical Performer, David Harrington - Musical Performer, John Sherba - Musical Performer, Jeffrey Zeigler - Musical Performer, Evan Tussman - Post Production Supervisor, Sandrine Gros D'Aillon - Production Coordinator, Simon Chamberland - Properties Master, Dominick Tavella - Re-Recording Mixer, Kimi Webber - Script Supervisor, Johanne Caporicci - Second Assistant Director, Francois Dion - Special Effects Assistant, Stephen Gilbert - Special Effects Coordinator, Takashi Seida - Still Photographer, Stephen Barden - Supervising Sound Editor, Craig Henighan - Supervising Sound Editor, Pete Romano - Underwater Photography, David Sanger - Visual Effects Producer, Mark G. Soper - Visual Effects Producer, Marc A. Rousseau - Visual Effects Producer, Jill Purdy - ADR Editor, David Boulton - ADR Recordist, Bobby Johanson - ADR Recordist, Trent Richmond - ADR Recordist, Caroline Lachance - Art Department Assistant, Camille Parent - Assistant Art Director, Martine Gagnon - Assistant Costumer Designer, Louis-Martin Pepperall - Assistant Location Manager, Martin Gauthier - Assistant Properties, André Valade - Assistant Properties, Annie Carpentier - Assistant Properties, Jacob Fortier - Best Boy Electric, Paul Viau - Best Boy Electric, Jeff Scott - Best Boy Electric, Luc Gosselin - Best Boy Electric, François Lacasse - Best Boy Electric, Denis Lamothe - Best Boy Electric, Paul Tremblay - Best Boy Grip, Daniel Robidoux - Best Boy Grip, Yanka Pelletier - Best Boy Grip, Tracy Shields - Casting Assistant, Blanche-Danielle Boileau - Costumes Supervisor, Nelson Ferreira - Dialogue Editor, Pierre Charpentier - Dolly Grip, Stephane Byl - Electrician, Stéphane Leblanc - Electrician, Jean-François Da Sylva-La Rue - Electrician, David Desgroseillers - Electrician, Daniel Goyens - Electrician, Jean Levasseur - Electrician, Peter Stewartson - Electrician, Julie Breton - Extra Casting, Flora Eleftheriou - First Assistant Accountant, Michael Annett - First Assistant Accountant, Julie Cyrenne - First Assistant Accountant, Jennifer Apel - First Assistant Editor, Steve Baine - Foley Artist, Gina Gyles - Foley Artist, Yan-Fredéric D'Amour - Greensman, Vincent Gauvin - Greensman, Jean-Jacques Dion - Key Hairstylist, Jocelyne Bellemare - Key Make-up, Julie Casault - Key Make-up, John Palermo - Personal Assistant, Jane Bulmer - Personal Assistant, Michael Bradley Combs - Personal Assistant, Natalie Borlaug - Personal Assistant, Hieu Ho - Personal Assistant, Brandon Blinn - Personal Assistant, Nicole Romano - Personal Assistant, Will Rowbotham - Personal Assistant, Sylvia Pyke - Personal Assistant, Mark Heyman - Personal Assistant, Erin Laing - Personal Assistant, Nancy Partheniou - Production Accountant, Rosanna Bruni - Second Assistant Accountant, Roch Boucher - Second Assistant Camera, Eric Aubin - Second Assistant Camera, Robert Ditchburn - Second Unit Assistant Director, Stephan McKenzie - Set Dresser, Ricardo Montemiglio - Set Dresser, Danny Turgeon - Set Production Assistant, Chris Wolfgang Mauch - Storyboard Artist, Geoffrey Isherwood - Storyboard Artist, Alain Caporicci - Transportation Captain, Michel Mollicone - Transportation Coordinator, Digital Dimension - Visual Effects, Buzz Image Group - Visual Effects, Inc. Look Effects - Visual Effects, Technicolor Creative Services - Visual Effects, Amalgamated Pixels Inc. - Visual Effects, Intelligent Creatures - Visual Effects, Mokko Studio - Visual Effects, Daniel Hamelin - Set Decorator, Martine Kazemirchuk-Giguère - Set Decorator, Paul Hotte - Set Decorator, Philippe Lord - Set Decorator, Audrey David - Clapper Loader, Steve Bowen - Color Timing, Luc Champagne - Craft Service/Catering, Nicolas Betsos - Craft Service/Catering, Michel Martowski - Craft Service/Catering, Peter Persaud - Foley Recordist, André Bélaïeff - Generator Operator, Réal Saulnier - Generator Operator, Exact Cut - Negative Cutter, Kim Beauchemin - Production Secretary, Danielle St. Arnaud - Set Medic/First Aid, Dr. Michael Yin - Set Medic/First Aid, Pierre Cote - Special Effects Technician, Erick Hebert - Special Effects Technician, Jacques Langlois - Special Effects Technician, Marc Bienvenu - Special Effects Technician, David Loveday - Special Effects Technician, Vincent Marion - Special Effects Technician, Louis Pedneault - Special Effects Technician, Anabelle Berkani - Third Assistant Director, Stéphanie Girard-Hamelin - Video Assist, Anatol Treba - Video Playback, Andrew Weisblum - Visual Effects Editor, Isabelle Cote - Graphic Design, François Lattaro - Graphic Design, Amoeba Proteus - Title Design, Natacha Antiglio - Art Department Coordinator, Mick Gormaley - Assistant Music Editor, Alex Bullick - First Assistant Sound Editor, John Alexander - Carpenter, Patrick Ally - Carpenter, Léo Beausoleil - Carpenter, Mathieu Boisvert - Carpenter, David-Olivier Boivin - Carpenter, Martin Broduas - Carpenter, Ghislain Boucher - Carpenter, Patrick Boucher - Carpenter, François Brochu - Carpenter, François Cardin - Carpenter, Rémi Deroy - Carpenter, Jean-François Drapeau - Carpenter, Deheme Jeffrey - Carpenter, Louis-Jean Ebacher - Carpenter, Maxime Gagné - Carpenter, Serge Gagné - Carpenter, Bernard Gagnon - Carpenter, Olivier Guy - Carpenter, Marc Harvey - Carpenter, Yannick Hébert - Carpenter, Yann Lacasse - Carpenter, Geneviève Lebel - Carpenter, Sylvain Lefrançois - Carpenter, Alain Légaré - Carpenter, Richard Lepage - Carpenter, Patrice L'Espérance - Carpenter, André Lessard - Carpenter, Judicael Loumbangoye - Carpenter, Benoit Malo - Carpenter, Daniel Martin - Carpenter, Sylvie Massicotte - Carpenter, Alexander Mercier - Carpenter, Simon Pépin - Carpenter, Eric Perreault - Carpenter, Marc-André Proulx - Carpenter, Emmanuel Turcotte - Carpenter, Alain Brochu - Head Carpenter, Charles Richer - Compositor, Sean O'Hara - Compositor, Derek Bird - Compositor, Michael Collins - Compositor, Martha Soehendra - Compositor, Jason Snea - Lead Compositor, Charles Granger - Lead Compositor, Alain Lachance - Lead Compositor, Roger Mocenigo - Lead Compositor, Danny Lee - Digital Effects Compositor, Greg Astles - Digital Effects Compositor, Louis Kim - Digital Effects Compositor, Sam Lee - Digital Effects Compositor, Sneha Prabhakaran - Digital Effects Compositor, Scott Riopelle - Digital Effects Compositor, Vicki Silva - Digital Effects Compositor, Clancy Silver - Digital Effects Compositor, Francis Puthanangadi - Digital Effects Compositor, Jean Larose - Painter (digital), Martine Bacon - Painter (digital), Marie-Noel Bréard - Painter (digital), Luc De Schutter - Painter (digital), Jean Déry - Painter (digital), Manon Fontaine - Painter (digital), Maryse Labrie - Painter (digital), Paul Lacerte - Painter (digital), Denise Lafontaine - Painter (digital), Bruno Lavoie - Painter (digital), Marie-France Lavoie - Painter (digital), Jose Letourneau - Painter (digital), Jean-François Merlot - Painter (digital), Vasil Nikov - Painter (digital), Laurent Pereira - Painter (digital), Dominique Pottier - Painter (digital), Louise Trudeau - Painter (digital), Paul Zacharias - Painter (digital), Mélanie Schmitz - Painter (digital), Annie St. Pierre - Painter (digital), Danny Levesque - CG Animator, Jean-Pierre Riverin - CG Animator, Vincent Aird - Assistant Set Decorator, José F. Varela - Assistant Set Decorator

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Wikipedia: The Fountain
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The Fountain

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Darren Aronofsky
Produced by Arnon Milchan
Iain Smith
Eric Watson
Written by Screenplay:
Darren Aronofsky
Story:
Darren Aronofsky
Ari Handel
Starring Hugh Jackman
Rachel Weisz
Music by Clint Mansell
Cinematography Matthew Libatique
Editing by Jay Rabinowitz
Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures (US, German and French)
20th Century Fox (International)
Release date(s) November 22, 2006 (2006-11-22) (US)
Running time 96 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $35 million
Gross revenue $15,845,981

The Fountain is a 2006 American science fiction/fantasy film written and directed by Darren Aronofsky that follows three interwoven narratives that take place in the age of conquistadors, the modern-day period, and the far future. The film stars Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz, whose characters' romance exists in all three time periods. The Fountain explores the themes of love and mortality, drawing influences from the Fountain of Youth and the Tree of Life. The film is framed with visual language by using transition scenes, light, and shapes. It was produced by Warner Bros. Pictures and Regency Enterprises, and was distributed by 20th Century Fox outside of the United States. This is WB's first film produced with Regency Enterprises since 1997.

Originally to be filmed in 2002 on a budget of $70 million with Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett in the lead, The Fountain shut down production as a result of Pitt's departure. Aronofsky was able to resurrect the project in 2005 with half the budget. The director incorporated visual effects into The Fountain by using minimal computer-generated imagery; he reduced the use of computers by using inexpensive footage provided by a macro-photographer. The Fountain was commercially released in the United States on November 22, 2006, to divided reviews. The Fountain was originally rated R for some violence by the MPAA, but was re-rated PG-13 for some intense sequences of violent action, some sensuality and language for its final release.

Contents

Plot

The Fountain weaves together three related narratives that take place in the time of the conquistadors in Spain and the New World, modern time, and a future time in an ecosphere journeying through deep space.

The scientist

Research oncologist Tommy Creo (Hugh Jackman) attempts to reverse brain tumors in rhesus monkeys through animal testing. His work is motivated by his tumor-stricken wife Izzi (Rachel Weisz). When the tests fail on a monkey named Donovan, Tommy is inspired to break medical protocol and use an untested compound derived from a Guatemalan tree. At first, the drug fails to stop the tumor's growth, but surprisingly rejuvenates Donovan, healing his wounds and improving his cognitive abilities.

At home, Izzi points out a golden nebula to Tommy, describing it as Xibalba, the Mayan underworld. She also shows Tommy a book she is writing, set in the age of conquistadors, titled The Fountain. When she goes to sleep, Tommy reads the book and falls asleep as well. When he wakes up, he finds that Izzi has gone to the museum. He meets her there, and she explains the creation myth of the Mayans. She suddenly collapses from a seizure and is rushed to the hospital. She tells Tommy, at her bedside, that she no longer fears death. Tommy does not accept this and returns to his lab, working harder to find a cure for Izzi's brain tumor. While he is sitting there by her side she asks him to finish the book that she was writing.

During a visit, Izzi goes into cardiac arrest, and Tommy is forced by medical staff to leave the room. Tommy's associate Dr. Lillian Guzetti (Ellen Burstyn) finds him in the hall and tells him that Donovan's tumor is shrinking. Tommy rushes back into Izzi's room with the news, only to find that his wife cannot be resuscitated. At Izzi's funeral, Tommy tells Guzetti, "Death is a disease, it's like any other. And there is a cure. A cure. And I will find it."

The conquistador

In 16th century Spain, Grand Inquisitor Silecio (Stephen McHattie) demonizes the Spanish Queen Isabella (Weisz) as a heretic. He slowly acquires territories as part of his plan to take Spain from her, killing her followers along the way. Tomas (Jackman), a conquistador in the service of Isabella, plots to assassinate Silecio, only to be stopped by a subordinate, Captain Ariel (Cliff Curtis), bearing an urgent message from the Queen. Returning to Isabella's court, Tomas is given the mission of finding the Tree of Life. The tree's location is revealed on a hidden map displayed by a Mayan dagger stolen by Father Avila (Mark Margolis), whose Franciscan order backs the Queen.

Tomas journeys to the New World with Avila and fellow conquistadors to find the tree. As the search drags on and the hardships of the quest multiply, the men mutiny; Tomas restores order by killing the ringleaders as Avila reveals that they have arrived at their destination. As Tomas approaches the pyramid atop which the tree grows, Mayan warriors attack the conquistadors. Tomas's last two men are killed fleeing the battle. Tomas is spared by the warriors, who force him to climb the pyramid. When Tomas reaches the temple at the top, he is stabbed in the abdomen by a Mayan priest.

The astronaut

The astronaut, Tom (Jackman), travels toward a golden nebula in an ecospheric spacecraft housing a dying tree. Tom meditates in padmasana and practices Tai Chi. Kept young by compounds he produces from the tree's bark, Tom is haunted by visions of Izzi. He focuses on reaching the nebula, repeatedly assuring the tree that it will be reborn on arrival despite the amount of bark he has taken from it. Despite his assurance, the tree dies, leaving Tom to ponder the hundreds of years of travel that have been all to see Izzi again. Izzi haunts Tom in a vision and encourages him to finish writing her book, The Fountain. Tom faces his fear of death and accepts dying, allowing him to finally write the book's ending.

Resolution

Instead of killing Tomas, the Mayan priest identifies Tom (who is seen above Tomas in the lotus position) as First Father, the Mayan deity who sacrificed himself to create the world. The priest in turn presents himself as a sacrifice, and Tomas hesitantly slits his throat. Passing through a doorway, the conquistador finds the Tree of Life in a garden atop the pyramid. As he pierces it with the stolen Mayan dagger, its sap spills onto the ground, and a small plant instantly grows and blossoms where it fell. Taking this as a sign of rejuvenation, Tomas applies some sap to his abdominal wound, healing himself. He then begins to greedily drink the sap. He stops only when he begins to feel a sudden and tremendous pain and sees Xibalba appear above him. His victory cut short, he collapses in pain. Leaves and flowers then start bursting from his body, burying him. The future Tom is then shown passing into the heart of the nebula, wearing a ring given to Tomas by the Queen of Spain, and entering Xibalba at peace with the thought of his imminent death. As Xibalba collapses and supernovas Tom's body is disintegrated and absorbed into the dead tree rejuvenating it. In the present day Tommy is seen planting a tree seed over Izzi's grave, doing his best to accept his wife's death. At the same moment, in the sky above, we see Xibalba's supernova event.

Development

In 1999, Darren Aronofsky and actor Jared Leto saw The Matrix together. Aronofsky said he had mused after seeing the film, "What kind of science fiction movie can people make now?"[1] Aronofsky began to consider new ideas for a science fiction film with his friend from college, Ari Handel.[1] In April 2001, Aronofsky entered negotiations with Warner Bros. and Village Roadshow to direct an untitled sci-fi epic with actor Brad Pitt in the lead role.[2] Aronofsky's previous film, Requiem for a Dream, had been screened for Pitt, and the preliminary script for The Fountain persuaded the actor to join the project.[3] Aronofsky had been writing the film with Handel. The director said the film would explore new territory similar to how Star Wars, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and The Matrix had redefined the genre. Aronofsky wanted to go beyond typical science fiction films that were plot-driven by technology and science. "We've seen it all. It's not really interesting to audiences anymore. The interesting things are the ideas; the search for God, the search for meaning," said Aronofsky. The director said that the film would be "the most ambitious thing I've done to date and the biggest challenge".[2]

Aronofsky visited Palenque early on in the film's development

Aronofsky was influenced by the accounts of Uruguayan journalist Eduardo Galeano, who wrote examples of myth from an indigenous perspective,[4] particularly Galeano's Genesis trilogy.[3] The film Once Upon a Time in America also served as an influence in Aronofsky's writing of The Fountain.[5] The director traveled with a crew to Central America to consult with Mayan experts like Moises Morales Marquez and to explore the ruins of Palenque. The group also made a visit to Tikal, a jungle location that had been featured in the original Star Wars.[1] To design a rainforest set, the films Aguirre, the Wrath of God and The Holy Mountain were screened for the crew for inspiration.[6] In June 2001, actress Cate Blanchett entered talks to join Aronofsky's project.[7] Aronofsky, who wanted the film's actual title to be a secret, gave the project the working title of The Last Man.[8] Production was postponed to improve the script and wait for Blanchett, pregnant at the time of signing on board, to give birth to her child that December. The start date for production was tentatively set to begin in summer 2002.[9]

In June 2002, Warner Bros. met with Aronofsky and producer Eric Watson, expressing concerns over an escalating budget and threatening to cease the project unless a co-financier was found. Watson petitioned independent production companies for support and was able to enlist Regency Enterprises for assistance.[3] Production was ultimately set for late October 2002 in Queensland and Sydney, Australia. The film, officially titled The Fountain, was greenlit with a budget of $70 million, co-financed by Warner Bros. and New Regency, who had filled the gap after Village Roadshow's withdrawal from the project. This marked the first collaboration between the two companies since Regency switched distribution to 20th Century Fox (who would distribute in most international territories). Actress Ellen Burstyn, who starred in Aronofsky's Requiem for a Dream, had also been cast alongside Pitt and Blanchett.[10]

Preparation for production of The Fountain cost $18 million.[11] Abruptly, Pitt, whose requested script revisions to the screenplay were not met, left the project seven weeks before the first day of shooting.[1] The actor went on to star as Achilles in director Wolfgang Petersen's Troy.[12] With the studio threatening to shut down the project, Aronofsky overnighted the script for The Fountain to actor Russell Crowe as a potential replacement for Pitt. However, Crowe, worn out from recently completing Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, declined the offer.[3]

In September 2002, Jeff Robinov, President of Production at Warner Bros. Pictures, announced that The Fountain would cease production,[12] with Blanchett receiving compensation for her time and the Australian crew being fired from the halted project.[3] Sets built for the production of the film, including a 10-story Mayan temple, were eventually auctioned off, in addition to props and other items.[13] Pitt said that he was disappointed to leave and added, "I remain encouraged that The Fountain will yet have its day."[12]

Production

In February 2004, Warner Bros. resurrected Aronofsky's project and began to court actor Hugh Jackman to replace Pitt in the lead role. The film received a second greenlight with a budget of $35 million, in part because of the director's willingness to leave costly set pieces out of the screenplay.[14] In August, actress Rachel Weisz joined Hugh Jackman for the project, filling the vacancy left by Blanchett. The Fountain was set to begin production in November 2004.[15] By March 2005, filming was underway at a sound stage in Montreal,[16] and lasted for 61 days.[3]

The film's locations, with the exception of scenes filmed at a museum and at a farmhouse, were built on the Montreal sound stage.[17] Aronofsky, influenced by Bernal Díaz del Castillo's The Conquest of New Spain, applied the narrative in writing the film's conquistador scenes.[18] Seventy extras were cast as Maya warriors, including twenty who were actually Guatemala Mayans; one of them, an actual spiritual leader, was cast as the Maya spiritual leader in the film.[16] To create a death scene, Aronofsky drew from Maya mythology the description of when valiant warriors die, flowers and butterflies emerge from their bodies. Aronofsky excluded butterflies from the death scene to minimize the film's computer-generated imagery but kept the effect of flowers bursting from the body.[19]

In The Fountain, the Tree of Life was a central design and part of the film's three periods. The tree was based on Kabbalah's Sefirot, which depicts a "map" of creation to understand the nature of God and how he created the world ex nihilo (out of nothing). The Sefirot Tree, being two to three hundred feet tall in lore, had to be resized for The Fountain to fit in the camera's frame.[19] Pieces of driftwood and pieces from real trees in Canada were collected for the tree's branches and roots, and sculpted molds of the pieces were applied to a steel frame to create the tree's body.[20] According to production designer James Chinlund, the tree, part of an enormous set surrounded by green screens, and other sets presented difficult logistical problems because of the small budget given to the resurrected project. The tree set itself had been a collaboration between Chinlund, Aronofsky, and cinematographer Matthew Libatique to create the appropriate design, particularly the palette in comparison to the biospheric ship that carries the tree in the astronaut period.[21]

Aronofsky described the astronaut period as a homage to David Bowie's "Space Oddity"; the protagonist's name "Tom" originating from the Major Tom of the popular song.[18] Co-writer Ari Handel researched biospherics, such as the Biosphere 2, to help design the ship that carried the protagonist and the tree through space.[21] With respect to the glass-sphered ship's design, Aronofsky argued, "There is no reason a spaceship would be built like a giant truck in space."[6]

The Fountain originally received an R rating for "Some violence" from the MPAA. The film was edited by Aronofsky and re-rated PG-13 for "Intense sequences of violent action, some sensuality and language".[22]

Casting

Director Darren Aronofsky was originally not familiar with Hugh Jackman until the actor was cast as Wolverine in X-Men. The director went to see Jackman perform as Peter Allen in the Broadway musical The Boy from Oz. Impressed with Jackman's performance, Aronofsky met with the actor, who had been looking for "a role that could show a lot of dimension". In addition to Jackman's casting, Aronofsky wrote into the script roles for Ellen Burstyn and Mark Margolis, who had appeared in the director's previous film, Requiem for a Dream.[18]

"It is the hardest job I've worked and by far the most satisfying. Darren wants blood. As a director, he is very much inside my head."
— Hugh Jackman on his experience filming The Fountain[16]

Jackman researched and prepared for his role by practicing tai chi.[23] Jackman took 14 months to achieve the lotus position, which is seen in the film. Jackman also watched a woman undergo brain tumor surgery and had been shaken to see the woman have similar blond hair to his wife: "All I could think of was my wife on that table. As much as I'd read the script and theorized and practiced philosophy, I knew in that moment that I was so not ready for death."[24] The actor portrayed his various characters in The Fountain by physically acting differently for each persona. As the conquistador, Jackman was upright and forward-leaning to evoke an unstoppable nature. As the scientist, the actor hunched over with a dedicated focus on his character's work, being weighed down by the "world on his shoulders". As the astronaut, Jackman practiced the state of zen but also exhibited a continued persistence in his endeavour.[23]

Jackman suggested to Darren Aronofsky the possibility of casting Rachel Weisz as his protagonist's wife. The director, being in a relationship with the actress and living with her, had previously hesitated to show the studio signs of favoritism in casting Weisz. With Jackman's earnest recommendation, the actress was cast as Isabel.[25] Weisz prepared for her role by reading books and first-person accounts about people who had terminal illnesses.[23] The actress also went to hospitals to visit young people who were dying and under hospice care. "There were a few days where I was in the headspace where I could say: 'I could go now'," said Weisz.[26]

Visual effects

Jeremy Dawson and Dan Schrecker, who had provided visual effects for Darren Aronofsky's π and Requiem for a Dream, returned to The Fountain to help the director with the film's effects. The pair were assigned with the task of creating as little computer-generated imagery as possible, a difficult task with a third of the film taking place in deep space. Aronofsky chose to avoid effects that would make the film look dated in several decades but instead hold up as well as a film like 2001: A Space Odyssey. Dawson said, "Using CG is really the easy route because it's so prevalent and the tools are great. What it did was really force us to come up with creative solutions to solve a lot of our problems."

One creative solution was uncovering Peter Parks, a specialist in macro photography, who had retrieved deep-sea microorganisms and photographed them in 3-D under partial funding from the Bahamas government. Parks brewed chemicals and bacteria together to create reactions of which Schrecker and Dawson shot 20,000 feet worth of film in the course of eight weeks for The Fountain.[21] To create the effects, Peter Parks had taken advantage of fluid dynamics, which affected the behavior of the substances that he photographed. "When these images are projected on a big screen, you feel like you're looking at infinity. That's because the same forces at work in the water—gravitational effects, settlement, refractive indices—are happening in outer space," Parks said. The specialist's talent convinced the film's creative department to go beyond computer-generated imagery and follow Parks' lead. Instead of millions of dollars for a single special effects sequence, Parks generated all the footage for the film for just $140,000.[1]

The visual effects company Look Effects worked on 87 shots for The Fountain that included major set extensions, digital mattes, image enhancement, face replacement and blemish removal, as well as animating key elements to the film's story. Henrik Fett, the visual effects supervisor of Look Effects, said, "Darren was quite clear on what he wanted and his intent to greatly minimize the use of computer graphics... [and] I think the results are outstanding."[27]

Musical score

Clint Mansell, the composer for Aronofsky's previous films, π and Requiem for a Dream, reprised his role as composer for The Fountain. The San Francisco-based string quartet Kronos Quartet, who had previously performed for the Requiem for a Dream soundtrack, and Scottish post-rock band Mogwai also contributed to the film score.[28] Darren Aronofsky hoped that David Bowie, whose song "Space Oddity" helped influence the film's astronaut period, would record a "third Tom song" as the musical artist worked briefly with composer Clint Mansell during production.[18] The plan was for Bowie to rework pieces of the score and to vocalize them, but this did not go through.[29] Instead, Mansell researched possible scores to tie together the three different time periods that spanned The Fountain. He wanted the overall feel of the score to be organic, and considered implementing orchestral and electronic elements that would have "a real human element to them that breathes".[21] The score was designed concurrently with the film's production instead of during the post-production phase. For the score, Mansell created a mood that flourished as the film progressed. He described the process of composing the music, "It's instinct and listening to what the film is telling you it needs."[6]

Mansell drew from five to six years of writing material for The Fountain. Initially, the composer intended for the score to be pure percussion when the film was originally meant to be epic in scale. Mansell, lacking classical training, collaborated with an assistant in creating the score. Both had deconstructed the composer's initial pieces for The Fountain and re-played them in a key so the lead melodies could harmonically play with every progression. The song "Together We Will Live Forever" was an electronic piece designed by Mansell to serve as the protagonist's memory theme. Lead singer Antony Hegarty was commissioned to create a vocal piece over "Together We Will Live Forever" for the end credits, but the director decided that the vocals would not be appropriate to end the film. The song was instead redone with pianist Randy Kerber.[29]

Nonesuch Records, the home of The Fountain musical contributor Kronos Quartet, released the film's musical collaborations between composer Clint Mansell, Kronos Quartet, and Mogwai. The soundtrack, entitled The Fountain: Music from the Motion Picture, was released on November 21, 2006.[30]

Clint Mansell received a nomination for the 2006 Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score for The Fountain,[31] but lost to Alexandre Desplat for The Painted Veil.[32] Mansell has also received a nomination for the 2006 BFCA Critics' Choice Award for Best Composer, but lost to Phillip Glass for The Illusionist.[33] Mansell won the Chicago Film Critics Association's 2006 award for Best Original Score.[34] He has also won the World Soundtrack Award for Best Original Soundtrack of the Year and Public Choice Award.[35]

Themes

The Fountain begins with a paraphrase of Genesis 3:24, the Biblical passage that reflects the fall of man. Hugh Jackman emphasizes the importance of the fall in the film: "The moment Adam and Eve ate of the tree of knowledge, of good and evil, humans started to experience life as we all experience it now, which is life and death, poor and wealthy, pain and pleasure, good and evil. We live in a world of duality. Husband, wife, we relate everything. And much of our lives are spent not wanting to die, be poor, experience pain. It's what the movie's about."[24] Darren Aronofsky had also interpreted the story of Genesis as the definition of mortality for humanity. He inquired of the fall, "If they had drank from the tree of life [instead of the tree of knowledge] what would have separated them from their maker? So what makes us human is actually death. It's what makes us special."[36]

The theme of thanatophobia is described by Aronofsky as a "movement from darkness into light, from black to white", tracing the journey of a man scared of death and moving toward it.[37] The theme is highlighted by Aronofsky's use of visual language, such as shooting Jackman's characters in shadows until the story's light-saturated conclusion, while Weisz's characters are awash with light in each period.[38] Along these lines, Aronofsky made use of the color of gold, as gold was the sought-after treasure of the conquistadors. "When you see gold, it represents materialism and wealth and all these things that distract us from the true journey that we're on," Aronofsky said.[37] The director also used similar geometric constructs in the film to distinguish the three chronological narratives. The 16th century conquistador's tale reflected triangles through pyramids and constellations, the 21st century researcher's period reflected rectangles through doors, windows, and computer screens, and the 26th century contemplative's journey reflected circles and spheres through the spacecraft and stellar bodies.[39]

Darren Aronofsky emphasized that the narratives in their time periods and their respective convergences were open to interpretation. The director maintained that the film's intricacy and underlying message is "very much like a Rubik's cube, where you can solve it in several different ways, but ultimately there's only one solution at the end".[40] Critics have observed recurring, mythological references to themes of enlightenment, redemption, the Hindu concept of cycle of birth and death and moksha, the Biblical Tree of Life,[41] the Buddha,[41] and the world-tree Yggdrasil.[42] In the same vein, Jackman views the story as a modern myth that helps people to understand the meaning of life, explains the unexplainable, and fosters understanding. "These fables may not make scientific sense, but somehow they explain the world to us," said Jackman.[43] Aronofsky later explained: "It's about this endless cycle of energy and matter, tracing back to the Big Bang," he said. "We're all just borrowing this matter and energy for a little bit, until it goes back into everything else, and that connects us all."[44]

Journalists Victoria Alexander and Robert Butler theorize that Tommy Creo's storyline is a grief-induced hallucination[45] caused by ingesting the bark of the tree.[46] Brian Orndorf describes the visual artifacts of Creo's struggle as "the mental breakdown of a man who is looking for hope in all the wrong places."[47] Strictly fact-based analyses offer the film's central ("real") essence as "the final three days of... two people very believably and relatably in love,",[41] suggesting its abstract and futuristic elements to be non-literal representations akin to "astral projection"[42] or "the psychology of survivor's guilt."[48] A subset of reviewers (Anderson, Brussat) take the Tom-present, Tom-future, and Izzi-tree comparisons more directly, asserting that Creo's wife has transformed into[49] or become part of the tree,[50] to which Dana Stevens adds "Tommy Creo, the present-day husband and scientist, should never have climbed into that bubble in a centuries-long attempt to defer his wife's death."[51] More middle-of-the-road interpretations posit the notion of three distinct storylines to be "sort of true and yet not true",[41] introducing an in-between possibility wherein the narratives might exist on multiple levels.

Marketing

When actor Brad Pitt left director Darren Aronofsky's project in 2002, the director preserved the rights to printing a graphic novel similarly titled The Fountain. Aronofsky said, "I knew it was a hard film to make, and I said at least if Hollywood fucks me over at least I'll make a comic book out of it."[52] He shopped the story to Vertigo Comics and was impressed by the illustrations of comic book artist Kent Williams. Aronofsky hired Williams to create the graphic novel for The Fountain based on the script that was originally intended to be used for the project involving Pitt and Cate Blanchett. Ari Handel, co-writer for the film, provided Williams with research, photographs, and images on "Mayans, astronomy, pulsars, and all kinds of cool stuff" to help with the graphic novel's design. Aronofsky gave Williams the freedom to interpret the story as the artist saw fit.[52]

The Fountain originally had a release date of October 13, 2006, but the film was delayed to create a "long-lead campaign" and generate anticipation via word of mouth. The final release date of The Fountain was set for November 22, 2006.[53] Aronofsky sent his screenplay to a group of eleven artists: Phil Hale, Martin Wilner, Jason Shawn Alexander, Kostas Seremetis, Dave Gibbons, Barron Storey, James Jean, Jim Lee, Olivier Bramanti, Seth Fisher, and Bill Sienkiewicz. The director invited them to interpret the screenplay in each one's chosen medium, and the interpretations were initially meant to be available on the website for The Fountain.[54] Darren Aronofsky also published a book in November 2006 based on The Fountain that contains production stills, the original script, original art, and observations by the film's creators.[55] The content and research agency Ramp Industry launched The Fountain Remixed, an official website driven by user-generated content. Users could download freely provided audio parts from The Fountain's film score, remix the music, and upload the work onto the website to be evaluated by other users.[56]

Reception

The Fountain was originally scheduled for a late 2005 release but was delayed by Rachel Weisz's pregnancy, and did not make a showing at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival.[57] The film finally held its world premiere at the 63rd Venice International Film Festival on September 2, 2006.[58] While several critics booed the film at the festival's press screening, The Fountain received a 10-minute standing ovation at the public screening the following evening.[11] The Fountain was commercially released in 1,472 theaters in the United States and Canada on Wednesday, November 22, 2006, a day before the American Thanksgiving holiday. The film earned $3,768,702 in the U.S. and Canadian box office during the opening weekend of November 24. The Fountain earned $10,144,010 in the United States and Canada, and the film has grossed $5,761,344 in other territories, totaling $15,905,354 worldwide.[59]

On Rotten Tomatoes, The Fountain has a 51% overall approval out of 181 reviews from critics and a 26% Cream of the Crop approval out of 181 reviews from major news outlets.[60] Leslie Felperin of Variety described the switching between time periods throughout the film as abrupt and considered the visual effects to be similar to a "remake of the wormhole section of '2001: A Space Odyssey,' as produced by makers of instructional videos for beginning yoga students".[61] IGN's Filip Vukcevic described The Fountain as "a film that is not easily accessible", and commended Aronofsky's direction and Jackman's performance to shape the emotional core of the film.[62] On the other hand, MTV’s Kurt Loder called the film “a classic; dazzling and visually intoxicating” [63] and Glenn Kenny from Premiere stated that The Fountain “may well restore your faith in the idea that a movie can take you out of the mundane and into a place of wonderment.” [64]

The Fountain won the $25,000 Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Feature Film Prize in Science and Technology for its unique approach, and the award was presented at the Hamptons International Film Festival in October 2006.[65] The film was also nominated Satellite Awards for Best Cinematography and Best Visual Effects in 2006,[66] but lost to Flags of Our Fathers and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, respectively.[67]

The Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films nominated 2006 Saturn Awards for The Fountain for Best Science Fiction Film, Best Actor (Hugh Jackman), and Best Special Effects,[68] but lost to Children of Men, Brandon Routh (Superman Returns), and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, respectively.[69]

Despite mixed reviews, Aronofsky stated in a December 2008 interview on the The Howard Stern Show that The Fountain is the work of which he is most proud. The Fountain ranks 484th on Empire magazine's 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time.[70]

In 2009, Aronofsky reflected on the reception of The Fountain, "There are a lot of Fountain-haters out [at the Venice Film Festival]. The film's about the fact that it's OK that we die, and we should come to terms with it. But many, many people don't want to think about that, so why pay money for a meditation on losing someone you love? Everything about western culture denies that." He also believed the film was released at the wrong time, "It was pre-Obama, smack in the middle of Paris Hilton time. But there has been a serious turn now, people are starting to realise that the party's over, finally. So we can stop thinking about the culture of superficiality, start to remember there are other things going on."[71]

Home video

The Fountain was released on DVD, HD DVD, and Blu-ray in the United States on May 15, 2007. The extras are a six-part featurette gallery about the film's periods and settings and the theatrical trailer.[72] DVD review site IGN notes that "there are serious issues with the 1.85:1 anamorphic transfer" on the DVD version of the film, in particular some scenes are "dark and indistinct", with poor shadow detail and a lack of sharpness throughout. The audio mix fares much better, being "lively with substantial, but tasteful, use of surround activity to immerse the viewer in the environments".[73]

Darren Aronofsky expressed disappointment with the DVD, having been in a long struggle with Warner Bros. as to whether he could record a commentary track. He has recorded a downloadable version, and is making an attempt at getting the film re-released in the Criterion Collection.[74]

Notes

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  2. ^ a b Brian Linder (2001-04-05). "Aronofsky, Pitt Team for Sci-Fi Epic". IGN. http://movies.ign.com/articles/050/050987p1.html. Retrieved 2006-11-01. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f Daniel Fierman (2006-12-01). "From Here to Eternity". Entertainment Weekly. http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,1557390,00.html. Retrieved 2007-02-18. 
  4. ^ Andrew Wright (2006-11-22). "Long Strange Trip". The Stranger. http://www.thestranger.com/seattle/Content?oid=110172. Retrieved 2007-02-17. 
  5. ^ Clint Morris (2007-01-29). "Ask a Celeb: Darren Aronofsky's Answers!". Moviehole.net. http://web.archive.org/web/20071011154256/http://www.moviehole.net/news/20070129_ask_a_celeb_darren_aronofskys.html. Retrieved 2007-02-17. 
  6. ^ a b c Steve Dollar (2006-11-06). "The Fountain of youth...". Paste. http://www.pastemagazine.com/action/article?article_id=3493. Retrieved 2006-11-11. 
  7. ^ Brian Linder (2001-06-28). "Blanchett Joining Pitt in Aronofsky's Next". IGN. http://movies.ign.com/articles/300/300933p1.html. Retrieved 2006-11-10. 
  8. ^ Fred Topel (2006-11-27). "Crave talks to Darren Aronofsky". CraveOnline.com. http://www.craveonline.com/filmtv/articles/04647134/crave_talks_to_darren_aronofsky.html. Retrieved 2006-12-18. 
  9. ^ Brian Linder (2001-08-31). "Aronofsky's Sci-Fi Epic Postponed". IGN. http://movies.ign.com/articles/305/305442p1.html. Retrieved 2006-11-10. 
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  11. ^ a b Geoffrey Macnab (2006-09-07). "'I knew we were going to get attacked ... '". Guardian Unlimited. http://arts.guardian.co.uk/features/story/0,,1866438,00.html. Retrieved 2006-10-08. 
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  64. ^ Glenn Kenny. http://celebrity.premiere.com/movie-The+Fountain+2006l. 
  65. ^ Jeff Sneider (2006-10-22). "Hamptons lauds 'Man'". Variety. http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117952426.html?categoryid=13&cs=1. Retrieved 2006-11-11. 
  66. ^ "List of 11th Annual Nominees" (PDF). International Press Academy. http://www.pressacademy.com/satawards/forms/pdf/2006-IPA-Nom-Announce.pdf. Retrieved 2007-02-17. 
  67. ^ "Winner Announcement" (PDF). International Press Academy. http://www.pressacademy.com/satawards/forms/pdf/WinnerListMediaAdvisory.pdf. Retrieved 2007-05-10. 
  68. ^ "33rd Annual Saturn Awards Nominations". Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films. http://www.saturnawards.org/nominations.html. Retrieved 2007-02-20. 
  69. ^ David S. Cohen (2007-05-10). "'Superman' tops Saturns". Variety. http://www.variety.com/awardcentral_article/VR1117964717.html?nav=news&categoryid=1983&cs=1. Retrieved 2007-05-11. 
  70. ^ "The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time". Empire. http://www.empireonline.com/500/3.asp. Retrieved 2009-05-14. 
  71. ^ "Darren Aronofsky: 'Everyone gets cheques now'". The Guardian. June 24, 2009. 
  72. ^ "Warner Brings 'The Fountain' to Blu-ray, HD DVD". High-Def Digest. 2007-03-07. http://www.highdefdigest.com/news/show/Warner/Disc_Announcements/Warner_Brings_The_Fountain_to_Blu-ray,_HD_DVD/515. Retrieved 2007-03-19. 
  73. ^ Peter Schorn (2007-05-08). "The Fountain Review". IGN. http://dvd.ign.com/articles/786/786367p2.html. Retrieved 2007-05-10. 
  74. ^ Peter Sciretta (2007-05-30). "Darren Aronofsky Blames Warner Bros For Fountain DVD". /Film. http://www.slashfilm.com/2007/05/30/darren-aronofsky-blames-warner-bros-for-fountain-dvd/. Retrieved 2007-06-01. 

References

  • Calhoun, John (November 2006). "Eternal love". American Cinematographer 87 (11): 50–60,62–63. ISSN 0002-7928. 
  • Eisenthal, Bram (October 2006). "Drinking in the fountain". Fangoria (257): 88–91. ISSN 0164-2111. 
  • Fordham, Joe (October 2006). "Celestial Alchemy". Cinefex (107): 92–98,101–106,109–112,116,118. ISSN 0198-1056. 
  • Goldsmith, Jeff (September 2006). "Untitled". Creative Screenwriting 13 (5): [52]–57. ISSN 1084-8665. 
  • Macaulay, Scott (October 2006). "Death defying". Filmmaker 15 (1): 40–45,128,130–131. ISSN 1063-8954. 
  • Shewman, Den (September 2006). "Leave something to discover". Creative Screenwriting 13 (5): 58–59. ISSN 1084-8665. 
  • Hughes, David (July 2006). "Lost in time: Where the hell is The Fountain?". Empire (205): 53–55. ISSN 0957-4948. 
  • Longwell, Todd (August 2005). "CFQ Update: Man out of Time". Cinefantastique 37 (5): 7,9–10. ISSN 0145-6032. 

Further reading

External links


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