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The Virgin Suicides

  • 1999
  • R
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
181K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,110
170
Kirsten Dunst in The Virgin Suicides (1999)
A group of male friends become obsessed with five mysterious sisters who are sheltered by their strict, religious parents in suburban Detroit in the mid 1970s.
Play trailer1:00
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Coming-of-AgeTeen DramaTragedyDramaRomance

A group of male friends become obsessed with five mysterious sisters who are sheltered by their strict, religious parents in suburban Detroit in the mid 1970s.A group of male friends become obsessed with five mysterious sisters who are sheltered by their strict, religious parents in suburban Detroit in the mid 1970s.A group of male friends become obsessed with five mysterious sisters who are sheltered by their strict, religious parents in suburban Detroit in the mid 1970s.

  • Director
    • Sofia Coppola
  • Writers
    • Jeffrey Eugenides
    • Sofia Coppola
  • Stars
    • Kirsten Dunst
    • Josh Hartnett
    • James Woods
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    181K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,110
    170
    • Director
      • Sofia Coppola
    • Writers
      • Jeffrey Eugenides
      • Sofia Coppola
    • Stars
      • Kirsten Dunst
      • Josh Hartnett
      • James Woods
    • 620User reviews
    • 148Critic reviews
    • 77Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 15 nominations total

    Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:00
    Trailer
    A Guide to the Films of Sofia Coppola
    Clip 2:12
    A Guide to the Films of Sofia Coppola
    A Guide to the Films of Sofia Coppola
    Clip 2:12
    A Guide to the Films of Sofia Coppola

    Photos194

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    Top cast66

    Edit
    Kirsten Dunst
    Kirsten Dunst
    • Lux Lisbon
    Josh Hartnett
    Josh Hartnett
    • Trip Fontaine
    James Woods
    James Woods
    • Mr. Lisbon
    Kathleen Turner
    Kathleen Turner
    • Mrs. Lisbon
    Michael Paré
    Michael Paré
    • Adult Trip Fontaine
    • (as Michael Pare)
    Scott Glenn
    Scott Glenn
    • Father Moody
    Danny DeVito
    Danny DeVito
    • Dr. Horniker
    A.J. Cook
    A.J. Cook
    • Mary Lisbon
    Hanna Hall
    Hanna Hall
    • Cecilia Lisbon
    Leslie Hayman
    • Therese Lisbon
    Chelse Swain
    Chelse Swain
    • Bonnie Lisbon
    Anthony DeSimone
    • Chase Buell
    • (as Anthony Desimone)
    Lee Kagan
    Lee Kagan
    • David Barker
    Robert Schwartzman
    Robert Schwartzman
    • Paul Baldino
    FourTee
    FourTee
    • Parkie Denton
    • (as Noah Shebib)
    Jonathan Tucker
    Jonathan Tucker
    • Tim Weiner
    Joe Roncetti
    Joe Roncetti
    • Kevin Head
    Hayden Christensen
    Hayden Christensen
    • Jake Hill Conley
    • Director
      • Sofia Coppola
    • Writers
      • Jeffrey Eugenides
      • Sofia Coppola
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews620

    7.2181.1K
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    Featured reviews

    Kirpianuscus

    five girls

    A beautiful adaptation of a great novel.

    It is the premises for this admirable work of sofia Coppola to reflect, in precise manner, the universe proposed by Jeffrey Eugenides. The faithfull portrait of characters, atmosphere, life in neighborhood is one of basic virtues.

    The second good job remains the acting and the surprising way to define, from Josh Hartnett to Kirsten Dunst the complexity of age, the seduction and vulnerability and life like dream, preserving the ambiguity defining the story.

    Not the last virtue is the intensity of emotion of reader of novel, rediscovering details and slices , accurate adaptated.

    A film about loneliness, life of small comunity , a couple loving, in his way , cold and precise, their daughters and a form of vulnerability , not surprising for teens, but defining the perspective about life in cold manner.
    7daoldiges

    Suicides Worthy of Reconsideration

    When I first saw The Virgin Suicides during its original release, I thought it was a good looking film but suffered from the 'style over substance' syndrome. Having revisited recently I have changed my mind.

    What does it all mean and how is this film to be viewed. I initially thought it was all and really only about the girls, but years later I realize it's more about the boys/now men. The whole thing is told exclusively from their perspectives. And one that is but distant memories/recollection from their youth. As such the viewer really must take these decades of distance between the events and the retelling into consideration and accept that the narration is suspect. It is suspect not only for the many years time, but it's basically teenage boys experiences with beautiful and captivating girls as the objects of those memories, told by the now adult teenage boys. The girls are so mysterious to the boys and the audience because teenage boys know nothing about teenage girls, and even though they are now adults they still don't understand them. The story is a combination of how things happened, along with how now decades later, they would have actually liked things to have played out. As such this makes a lot more sense and clarity to the story and one that I finally find to be interesting and worth checking out.
    6Boba_Fett1138

    A well crafted movie but the storytelling is lacking.

    "The Virgin Suicides" is a sort of mixed bag. It's a beautiful made movie with wonderful directed sequences in it but the storytelling doesn't always makes sense and is simply terrible lacking at times. A case of 'style over substance' you can perhaps conclude.

    It isn't always clear in the movie where the movie is heading to. This is mainly because there are often characters introduced in the movie, who once after they are out of the story, make you wonder what exactly their purpose for the movie was. Characters come and go in this movie and once you think that they are going to play an important part for the movie, they are already gone again. The story isn't always told from the right perspective which makes this movie at times a bit incoherent to watch. This is also due to the fact that at times the movie is set in 'present time' (1999), while the rest of the movie is set in the '70's. Those sort of scene's make it pretty obvious that this movie is based on a book. I'm sure all those element worked just fine in the book but for a movie it is pointless and adds no extra value to the story. A lot of things still remain unclear after the movie has ended, which makes this movie as a whole an unsatisfying one to watch.

    I also never really got into the characters. I never quite knew what went on in those girls heads and I never felt their desperateness and their cry for help. The portrayal of their parents (James Woods and Kathleen Turner) was also a opportunity wasted. Instead as strict and tough parents they are portrayed as simply narrow minded people, who have their own ideas about what's good and wrong for their children. If they had portrayed the parents as two completely strict and tough persons, the movie would had become more, claustrophobic, sensible, emotional and more understandable.

    The cast is good and has cameos in it from Danny DeVito and Scott Glenn and roles from Josh Hartnett and Hayden Christensen before they received real fame as actors. The movie however isn't really a character movie. The main essence of the movie is put on the style and look of it. For that reason the movie also perhaps feels a bit as a waste of a great cast.

    The movie is good looking and well directed by Sofia Coppola but it seemed that they forget about the story at times. It makes "The Virgin Suicides" a bit of an incoherent movie to watch at times. Because of the lacking storytelling the movie never truly becomes emotional or truly understandable and therefor it's nothing more than a just average drama that is good looking but nothing more than that.

    6/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    7moonspinner55

    "How much can you write about dead trees?"

    A strange, surreal flight-of-fancy of death and love, remembrance and how romanticized our memories become. It's also very funny, tending to mix the black comedy of something like "Heathers" with the stifling suburban scenario of "American Beauty" (but it's better than both). Kirsten Dunst is fantastic as the foxiest of five golden-toned sisters in the mid-'70s who feel trapped by their parents (a peculiar, but not overly monstrous couple), trapped by their feelings, trapped by time. They can breathe--and live freely--only in their fantasies (and perhaps in death), but do their realities represent a prison? It's the talent of writer-director Sofia Coppola not to push everything over-the-top; she's careful, she leaves the viewer contemplating the characters' motivations and actions. The situation is indeed unexplainable, yet it is in our nature to expect a resolution, to expect concrete evidence as to WHY and demand an answer. Yet there are no answers to the sadness of the strangers who live across the street, even as we pass through their lives and through their houses. "The Virgin Suicides" offers fascinating food for thought. *** from ****
    d_fienberg

    Captures the Dark Comedy and Lyric Poetry of the Book

    I'm uncertain why the daughter of a Hollywood icon would select as her first director effort a nearly unfilmable book of linguistic time bombs and nearly unspeakable tragedy. Jeffrey Eugenides's book The Virgin Suicides is one of the underappreciated gems of the 1990s and surely Sophia Coppola must have known that the critics would have it out for anything she did (see reviews listed under "acting: Part 3, The Godfather"). So Coppola, daughter of Francis Ford, decided to do something unexpected: She made a gem of a movie that's easy to like and complex enough to savour.

    Taking place "25 years ago" in "Michigan," The Virgin Suicides tells the story of a group of teenage boys and the Lisbon sisters, whose suicides changed them forever. The book is told with a rather unique choral narrator (the entire story is in the first person plural) which makes it clear that the focus of the story is not the Lisbons, but the boys and their attempts to restructure the events of what must have been their final summer of innocence. Similarly, the film features extensive voice-overs, culled from the book, coming from an unidentified member (or members) of the gang. You might wonder why you're never able to distinguish between any of the four or five or six males who wander through the story, or why at least several of the Lisbon girls also blend together, but rest assured it's intentional. The Virgin Suicides is very much about a baffled collective.

    The movie begins with the first suicide attempt of the youngest Lisbon girl. When the doctor examining her asks why should would try to kill herself she offers the simple response, "Obviously, Doctor, you have never been a thirteen year old girl." The book and film are both really about men and how incapable we are of understand what it's like to be a thirteen year old girl or a thirty year old woman or really anything in between. And what's even more frustrating is the fact that women seem to understand men so devastatingly well (a trait perfectly personified in Kirsten Dunst's portrayal of middle sister Lux). The narrative such as it is marches inexorably through the gradual awakening of the narrators and the inevitable realization that they never knew anything.

    Coppola, who also adapted the screenplay, makes decent use of the book's two metaphorical subplots -- an outbreak of Dutch Elm Disease and a cemetery worker's strike. The rot of suburban life lies at the core of this story and Coppola wisely never overplays her hand. She loves using mythic imagery, generally revolving around Dunst, an actress beginning to produce the kind of resume that speaks of longevity. Coppola's background in costuming is also evident, displaying the decadence and tackiness of the observing characters, contrasted with the spare Puritainism of the Lisbons.

    Coppola gets mostly good performances from the young generation of her cast. As the only two characters to get individual notice, Dunst and Josh Hartnett do excellent work. She's the animal core of the film and he perfectly captures the perplexed, corrupted purity of the male side of the story. Playing against type, James Woods is excellent as the Lisbon's introverted henpecked father and Kathleen Turner is effectively scary as their domineering mother.

    The film is also aided by some wonderful technical work including Jasna Stefanovic's nostalgic, but never cutesy production design and Edward Lachman's versatile cinematography. The soundtrack by the French band Air is also notable, mixed with various hit songs from the period.

    The Virgin Suicides has perhaps too many moments of whimsy, where it seems too devoted to its source, even when the material doesn't translate properly. But still, it's the moments of magic -- the Lisbon girls prom, an eerie family party, and phone conversation spoken only with records -- that stand out. I'd give this one an 8/10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      After she had written the script, Sofia Coppola was heartbroken to discover that another company was already producing an adaptation of the book themselves. However, they were not happy with their script, so she showed them hers and they ended up using it instead.
    • Goofs
      The father refers to his model airplane as a B model North American P-51 Mustang in British service, however, the model aircraft is actually a Curtiss P-40 Warhawk.
    • Quotes

      Narrator: [Narration] In the end we had pieces of the puzzle, but no matter how we put them together, gaps remained. Oddly shaped emptiness mapped by what surrounded them, like countries we couldn't name. What lingered after them was not life, but the most trivial list of mundane facts. A clock ticking on the wall, a room dim at noon, the *outrageousness* of a human being thinking only of herself.

    • Crazy credits
      When the title appears, it first appears like a schoolgirl's idle writing, replete with hearts replacing the "dots" over the "i's". The title then repeats over and over, in different modes of print and script (the handwriting equivalent of different typefaces and fonts), filling the screen. It is accompanied by various decorative doodling (an eye with tears, a caterpillar, clouds, unicorns, a flower, the sun).
    • Alternate versions
      Released in two versions, the general, worldwide theatrical release and an edited cut for television viewing in Germany. Runtimes are, respectively, "1h 37m (97 min)" (theatrical release) and "1h 30m (90 min) (TV) (Germany)".
    • Connections
      Featured in Air: Playground Love (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      On the Horizon
      Written and Performed by Sloan

      Courtesy of Murderecords

      Published by Two Minutes of Music Limited

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    FAQ21

    • How long is The Virgin Suicides?Powered by Alexa
    • Is the movie an adaptation or an original screenplay?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 19, 2000 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Vírgenes suicidas
    • Filming locations
      • 28 Dunloe Road, Toronto, Ontario, Canada(The Lisbon residence - the original property has been knocked down)
    • Production companies
      • American Zoetrope
      • Eternity Pictures
      • Muse Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $9,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,906,229
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $235,122
      • Apr 23, 2000
    • Gross worldwide
      • $10,414,053
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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