Memoria e allucinazione si intrecciano per esporre una storia di trauma, rivelando che Elyse è catatonica e istituzionalizzata in un ospedale statale.Memoria e allucinazione si intrecciano per esporre una storia di trauma, rivelando che Elyse è catatonica e istituzionalizzata in un ospedale statale.Memoria e allucinazione si intrecciano per esporre una storia di trauma, rivelando che Elyse è catatonica e istituzionalizzata in un ospedale statale.
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"Elyse! Are you aware that there may be something ... (dramatic pause) wrong?" Dr. Lewis (Anthony Hopkins)
The titular Elyse (Lisa Pepper) has indeed something wrong: catatonia. Her state, as diagnosed by her psychiatrist, Dr. Lewis, involves strange behavior and unresponsiveness. Her remedy calls for electric shock therapy, which sends her into herself and requires long months of therapy.
And so it goes in the drama Elyse, a story much more than just about diagnosis and therapy. In its minimalist approach by writer/director Stella Hopkins (Anthony's wife), relationships are the drama and maybe the cause for her mental illness. Her relationship with her husband Steve Bridges (Aaron Tucker) is remote and frosty, a combination of her neuroses and his interest elsewhere.
Elyse's jealousy about their live-in governess, Carmen (Tara Arrovave), and Elyse's combative relationship with her mother as well as her uneven attitude toward Steve's co-workers, point to an unbalanced heroine not helped at all by her pod of people. The director gently and slowly lets the actors play their parts in Elyse's undoing, including Elyse herself.
When Dr. Phillips is on camera, not enough for my taste, the film moves into a rich buffet of words and ideas, all minimalist but calling for more, so powerful is Hopkins in a role the opposite of Hannibal Lecter but strangely similar in the magnetic hold the actor has on his words. It's not so much that Phillips sets things right; it's that he sets in motion the thoughts and actions that seem right for the situation, relieving the audience's tension as it worries about the heroine's fate.
Adding to the cool tension are the contrasting black and white photography and a modern house whose glass and sharp corners reflect the loneliness and danger Elyse experiences. No matter what you think of the drama and dialogue, Elyse gives you an introduction to the malady of catatonia that you will never forget.
The titular Elyse (Lisa Pepper) has indeed something wrong: catatonia. Her state, as diagnosed by her psychiatrist, Dr. Lewis, involves strange behavior and unresponsiveness. Her remedy calls for electric shock therapy, which sends her into herself and requires long months of therapy.
And so it goes in the drama Elyse, a story much more than just about diagnosis and therapy. In its minimalist approach by writer/director Stella Hopkins (Anthony's wife), relationships are the drama and maybe the cause for her mental illness. Her relationship with her husband Steve Bridges (Aaron Tucker) is remote and frosty, a combination of her neuroses and his interest elsewhere.
Elyse's jealousy about their live-in governess, Carmen (Tara Arrovave), and Elyse's combative relationship with her mother as well as her uneven attitude toward Steve's co-workers, point to an unbalanced heroine not helped at all by her pod of people. The director gently and slowly lets the actors play their parts in Elyse's undoing, including Elyse herself.
When Dr. Phillips is on camera, not enough for my taste, the film moves into a rich buffet of words and ideas, all minimalist but calling for more, so powerful is Hopkins in a role the opposite of Hannibal Lecter but strangely similar in the magnetic hold the actor has on his words. It's not so much that Phillips sets things right; it's that he sets in motion the thoughts and actions that seem right for the situation, relieving the audience's tension as it worries about the heroine's fate.
Adding to the cool tension are the contrasting black and white photography and a modern house whose glass and sharp corners reflect the loneliness and danger Elyse experiences. No matter what you think of the drama and dialogue, Elyse gives you an introduction to the malady of catatonia that you will never forget.
Anthony Hopkins is the only great experience actor in this painfully slow made for TV movie. Main characters Elyse portrayal of a woman struggling with mental illness was horrible. She wasn't believable. It seems she Elyse just memorized her lines and at times delivers them in a repetitve fashion. Not worth watching! I can't believe such an excellent actor like Anthony Hopkins agreed to be in this film. Not sure what the BK and WH was supposed to portray but even when it switched to color the movie was still a failure. Hopefully Hopkins did this movie to donate his proceeds to Charity. I can't imagine what would have made this movie at least a 5.
This is the worst acting I have ever experienced. Except for Anthony Hopkins, the entire cast is horrible.
The storyline is just stupid and unbelievable.
Please do not watch this movie:P
If anyone is asking how Anthony Hopkins signed up for this exercise-in-tripe, I'll spare you a trip to Google. His wife--and boy oh boy, did she ever belch out (I mean, direct) a 'doozy.' Hands-down, some of the worst acting by an ensemble (if we can actually call it that) one will ever see. No joke intended--this is smack dab along the caliber of. Tommy Wiseau's "The Room." And that's without the relief of an occasional laugh. On the positive end, I'm confident that this will ensure us that Lisa Pepper will never become a mainstay on our silver screens. From the lousy, soporific screenplay to the lead performance from film school hell, this should have taken the lion's share of the Golden Raspberry Awards, but didn't. Why? The only reason I can think of is that it is SO bad it's beyond parody. Venture to it at your own risk.
WTF was this? Did the director, Hopkins wife, find this script in Woody Allen's recycle bin? Did Sir Anthony need a paycheck? The only thing that would make this worse is if Nick Cage made an appearance.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizSeveral clips of black-and-white sections of the film can be seen in color in the movie trailer.
- Colonne sonoreElyse's Lullaby
composed by Anthony Hopkins
featuring vocalist Kaitlin Huwe
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 35 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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