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Nine Lives

  • 2005
  • R
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
7.3K
YOUR RATING
Nine Lives (2005)
Captives of the very relationships that define and sustain them, nine women resiliently meet the travails and disappointments of life.
Play trailer2:19
10 Videos
28 Photos
Drama

Captives of the very relationships that define and sustain them, nine women resiliently meet the travails and disappointments of life.Captives of the very relationships that define and sustain them, nine women resiliently meet the travails and disappointments of life.Captives of the very relationships that define and sustain them, nine women resiliently meet the travails and disappointments of life.

  • Director
    • Rodrigo García
  • Writer
    • Rodrigo García
  • Stars
    • Kathy Baker
    • Amy Brenneman
    • Glenn Close
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    7.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rodrigo García
    • Writer
      • Rodrigo García
    • Stars
      • Kathy Baker
      • Amy Brenneman
      • Glenn Close
    • 75User reviews
    • 53Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos10

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:19
    Trailer
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 8
    Clip 1:34
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 8
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 8
    Clip 1:34
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 8
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 7
    Clip 1:16
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 7
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 10
    Clip 1:33
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 10
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 3
    Clip 1:32
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 3
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 5
    Clip 1:38
    Nine Lives Scene: Scene 5

    Photos28

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Kathy Baker
    Kathy Baker
    • Camille
    Amy Brenneman
    Amy Brenneman
    • Lorna
    Glenn Close
    Glenn Close
    • Maggie
    LisaGay Hamilton
    LisaGay Hamilton
    • Holly
    Elpidia Carrillo
    Elpidia Carrillo
    • Sandra
    Aomawa Baker
    • Female Guard
    Miguel Sandoval
    Miguel Sandoval
    • Deputy Sheriff Ron
    Mary Pat Dowhy
    • Nicole
    Andy Umberger
    Andy Umberger
    • Second Male Guard
    K Callan
    K Callan
    • Marisa
    Chelsea Rendon
    Chelsea Rendon
    • Sandra's Daughter
    Robin Wright
    Robin Wright
    • Diana
    • (as Robin Wright Penn)
    Jason Isaacs
    Jason Isaacs
    • Damian
    Sydney Tamiia Poitier
    Sydney Tamiia Poitier
    • Vanessa
    Holly Hunter
    Holly Hunter
    • Sonia
    Stephen Dillane
    Stephen Dillane
    • Martin
    Daniel Edward Mora
    Daniel Edward Mora
    • Receptionist
    Molly Parker
    Molly Parker
    • Lisa
    • Director
      • Rodrigo García
    • Writer
      • Rodrigo García
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews75

    6.77.2K
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    Featured reviews

    10aftonbelle3335

    Amazingly accurate and moving film

    I too saw this film at the Sundance Film Festival and was very, very happy with it. It's simply vignettes of nine women's lives (with intercepting characters and mutual acquaintances), the people in their lives and more importantly the relationships in their lives. They're sad and sometimes not so sad, examples of the walls we build around ourselves in our relationships and how we feel bound to people or stuck in situations that we can't escape. It's very well made, with each women's vignette composed of one long 10-12 minute scene (no cuts). The dialogue is completely natural as are the actor's portrayal's of their characters, and the characters seem so real-life, so believably everyday. I couldn't say which story I enjoyed the most, but Robin Wright Penn and Jason Isaac's scene and relationship was especially poignant for me and I thought, amazingly acted. Overall this movie is great and I would recommend it to anyone who is a student of human nature or just in need of a moving film.
    7noralee

    A Moving Series of Valentines to Women and the Actresses Who Play Them

    "Nine Lives" is a valentine to women as a life force (from pregnancy to abortion, and only incidentally about sex, to care-giving and death), and the superb actresses bask like flowers in the sun at the attention.

    Writer/director Rodrigo García creates nine vignettes, each introduced by the central character's name like a chapter heading, as master acting classes. In about ten minutes, each actress, and occasionally their male supporters, go from zero to ten, less through the language, which is so natural it seems improvised, but through their faces, bodies and inflections.

    Each woman faces an emotional crisis involving her relationship with a loved one -- parent, child, lover, husband, sister; sometimes the stories start them at a high point and they reach a catharsis, others are in the midst of a normal day and then get socked with interactions that rock their balance. Each tries to stay in control of their situations, with emotional prices to pay. About half the characters briefly cross-appear in stories that may come before their previous appearance, mostly to add ironic meanings to a situation or dialog that would have a different impact without the added information from the other vignette. A refrain of "I can't stop thinking about you" comes with different meanings about love and guilt or obsession each time, though this is more about connections between people (as symbolized by the webs behind the interstitial name cards).

    The two hander with Robin Wright Penn and Jason Isaacs (with a very creditable American accent, though he seemed to be playing a very similar character as he did on "West Wing") packs a wallop, mostly through Penn's expressions and complete body language, from her eyelids to her fingers to her feet. A shopping walk through the long aisles of your neighborhood supermarket may never have quite the same expectations. Garcia's gliding camera work adds to the emotional freight as by widening and lengthening the frame he gradually reveals more information about the two characters.

    Amy Brenneman paying respects at a funeral builds up in nervousness as we learn more about the complicated background of her relationship with the deceased, then goes for a crescendo in a brief, almost silently dynamic interaction with an explosive William Fichtner. This may be the first time that certain American Sign Language words have been used in a movie.

    Lisa Gay Hamilton's character is so emotionally wrought that you get agitated just watching her, even as we cry over why she's so radioactive.

    Kathy Baker facing surgery reveals more of the emotional complications for couples facing medical issues than a dozen Lifetime TV movies.

    Garcia well shows women caught between strong people, particularly the vignettes with Amanda Seyfried and Holly Hunter, though the latter recalls "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" too much. Molly Parker creates warm chemistry with women as a friend in two stories. Dakota Fanning actually acts her age and seems like a natural child for a change in her vignette with Glenn Close.

    I presume this was shot on digital video, judging by the saturated look of the beautiful cinematography. What will be lost by waiting to see the film on DVD will be the subtle details of the actresses' fulfilling performances that should be seen on a big screen.
    8Screen-7

    Snapshots that develop into a rewarding picture

    Another great movie by Rodrigo García in the same style as "Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her (2000)." Garcia shows his literary roots by making the cinematic equivalent of books of collected short stories. Collections of shorts have been done before but I don't remember it ever being done this effectively.

    As a viewer, you have to live with lots of unresolved issues since +- 15 minutes provides only a snapshot of these women's lives. But Garcia rewards the thoughtful viewer as themes emerge from the collection of sketches.

    Like in "Things You Can Tell..." the acting if first-class and scenarios authentic.

    The cast alone makes this movie worthwhile. How does Garcia get such terrific talent? I suspect that his short story format allows actresses/ors to fit in a quick Garcia movie between their big paycheck films, allowing them to up their credibility with an art-house flick. But these aren't throw-away roles... they really give it their best! Of course, you're going to like some segments better than others. I found it odd that Garcia LED with what I felt was one of the weaker segments (The LA Jail). He ends with one of the best (Dakota Flanning and Glenn Close). My favorite was Robin Wright Penn and Jason Isaacs in the grocery store. It touched me very deeply.

    The final story (Flanning and Close) is one of the sweetest and lightest which bring up my biggest criticism of the film... Garcia could lighten up a little. A little more humor and a little more playfulness could really help his next film... and I hope he does make another in this same style.

    My other criticism is of the cinematography which I don't find appealing... it tends to be overexposed and needlessly bleak at times. Admittedly, it does accurately convey both the emotions of the women and the feel of Southern California but I think it is overused. (Possibly he is trying to make the best of low budgets.) In summary.. this film is DEFINITELY worth watching as long as you are willing to accept it for what it is... a collection of snapshots rather than the more developed characters and story that traditional movies provide. If you are renting, I suggest that you also pick up a copy of "Things you can tell..." and have a mini Garcia film festival.
    7Buddy-51

    parts better than the whole

    Rodrigo Garcia's "Nine Lives" raises the question of just how emotionally invested a viewer can become in a character who appears on screen for no more than ten or a dozen minutes throughout the course of a movie. And what happens if ALL the main characters show up for that little a time? For this is the case with "Nine Lives," a compilation of vignettes about nine virtually unconnected ladies, each of whom is struggling with issues common to women in a modern world. Some are coping with messy relationships, others with regrets about past actions, still others with health issues and the looming possibility of death. Even though the stories abut slightly on one another from time to time, each exists essentially as a stand-alone sketch able to function without the others.

    The main problem with a movie like "Nine Lives" is that, for all the insights it offers into life and human relationships (and they are many), it simply can't develop its characters to any appreciable extent in the time it has allotted them. Just as we are becoming engaged by a particular woman and her situation, the movie shuts us down by cutting away to the next segment. This is really no criticism of the movie per se - which is a well written, well acted and well directed piece of lyrical film-making - but the structure dilutes our interest and robs the film of the cumulative force it might have had were the individual stories fleshed out to feature length.

    Still, given the limitations, this is a film filled with flavorful moments and fine performances from a large and gifted cast that includes Sissy Spacek, Mary Kay Place, Glenn Close, Dakota Fanning, Holly Hunter, Lisa Gay Hamilton, Robin Wright Penn, Joe Mantegna and Aiden Quinn, among many others. And the final moments are so tender, poignant and touching that they carry the film to a level where it transcends artifice and makes a genuine human connection with its audience. Thus, despite the reservations one might have about the film as a whole, the parts are more than compelling enough to make it well worth watching.
    9gradyharp

    The Kind of Movie Making that Restores Faith in the Medium

    Columbian director and writer Rodrigo García (Things you can tell just by looking at her, multiple episodes of Six Feet Under, Carnivale, The Sopranos, Fathers and Sons, etc) does what few writer/directors are capable of: García observes the human condition, finds the stories that such observations suggests, fleshes out these ideas into vignettes, and then weaves them into a tapestry of a film that is simply breathtaking.

    NINE LIVES is simply the reporting of nine women and their surrounding characters who are coping with an emotional crisis involving relationships with a parent, child, lover, husband, or sister and the manner in which each woman deals with keeping her life intact despite the trials of everyday living. Imagine walking down a street, as a flaneur, observing glimpses of a person and conversation that lasts only as long as the time you approach, pause and pass on by and you have an idea of the technique García uses. These little short stories are the stuff of life we all encounter: García pauses long enough to let them make an impact.

    Part of the beauty of this film is the sterling cast which includes some of our finest actors - Kathy Baker, Amy Brenneman, K Callan, Glenn Close, Stephen Dillane, Dakota Fanning, Holly Hunter, Jason Isaacs, Joe Mantegna, Ian McShane, Mary Kay Place, Aidan Quinn, Sissy Spacek, Robin Wright Penn - the list goes on. There is a sense of ensemble commitment to this film despite that only occasionally do the characters overlap. The writing is terse, understated, always saying just enough to arrest our attention before moving on, much the way life keeps passing. A very fine work, and one that reminds us that great movies from quiet stories come. Grady Harp

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      While the film was largely overlooked by moviegoers, critical reaction was generally favorable and both Roger Ebert and Richard Roeper included it on the year end top 10 lists.
    • Goofs
      In the "Sonia" chapter a camera mans arm is visible in the mirror on the floor in the living room.
    • Quotes

      Lorna: What? I don't want to be here with you.

      Andrew: I can't stop thinking of you.

      Lorna: Andrew.

      Andrew: I can't.

      Lorna: Andrew, your wife's funeral's in here.

      Andrew: She's not my wife. You're my wife. I married her because you left.

      Lorna: I have an idea. Why don't you and I make out in front of her dead body? It would excite you, huh?

      Andrew: This has nothing to do with her.

      Lorna: You don't think so? You don't think this is her day?

      Andrew: She's dead now! She doesn't have to worry now!

      Lorna: You shit, you've gone crazy.

      Andrew: No I haven't.

      [tries to touch her]

      Andrew: I masturbate thinking about you.

      [Lorna turns and walks in the room]

      Andrew: That time in the car - in Santa Cruz... You drove me crazy. Nobody can make me come like that. Only you can do that.

      [approaching her]

      Andrew: Do you think about me? Tell me! Tell me if you think about me sometimes!

      [looks her in this eyes, closely]

      Andrew: If you don't, I'll get out of here right now.

      Lorna: Did she know about this?

      [Andrew kisses Lorna]

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: The Best Films of 2005 (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Memories
      Written by Francois Paterson, Dominic Paterson and Christelle Pechin

      Performed by Soma Sonic

      Courtesy of Subsonic Recordings

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 2, 2005 (Italy)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • Mexico
    • Official sites
      • Magnolia Pictures
      • Official site (United States)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • American Sign Language
    • Also known as
      • Дев'ять життів
    • Filming locations
      • California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Mockingbird Pictures
      • Z Films
      • Nine Lives
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $478,830
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $28,387
      • Oct 16, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,591,523
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 55 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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