After two friends return home from the Vietnam War one becomes mentally unstable and obsesses with becoming a bird.After two friends return home from the Vietnam War one becomes mentally unstable and obsesses with becoming a bird.After two friends return home from the Vietnam War one becomes mentally unstable and obsesses with becoming a bird.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 3 wins & 1 nomination total
Pat Ryan
- Joe Sagessa
- (as Robert L. Ryan)
Maud Winchester
- Doris Robinson
- (as Maude Winchester)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Has Been Overlooked For Too Long:
"Birdy"is an outstanding character study with a well-written script that was directed by a very talented director (Alan Parker of "Pink Floyd The Wall", "Midnight Express", "Mississippi Burning", and "Angel Heart"). Matthew Modine and Nicolas Cage both gave unforgettable performances in this dark, disturbing yet somehow uplifting story of two friends from South Philadelphia, Al (Cage) and Birdy (Modine in the performance that easily could be one of the best ever given by any actor on screen and sadly has been overlooked for too long). Birdy is an innocent and odd young man who has been always fascinated by birds and wanted to learn to fly. Both friends had to take a traumatic tour of duty in Vietnam that affected them tremendously both physically and mentally. The film is not about Vietnam, though it is a brilliant story of friendship and how far Al would go for his friend. The film has one of the most original and surprising endings ever.
A Strange, Depressing Character Study
This is a strange and fascinating - but that likable - story about a kid who becomes obsessed with birds and then literally goes crazy. Matthew Modine plays the introverted "Birdy." A young Nicholas Cage plays his best friend, "Al."
It's not a particularly pleasant story. In fact, it's downright depressing many times. It also had an unusual ending, one the critics seemed to all pan but I liked. I thought it was neat.
The movie does keep your interest, so it gets decent points for that, and it certainly presents a unique character study.
I haven't seen this film in a long time, but after writing this review, I'd kind of like to view it again.....depressing or not.
It's not a particularly pleasant story. In fact, it's downright depressing many times. It also had an unusual ending, one the critics seemed to all pan but I liked. I thought it was neat.
The movie does keep your interest, so it gets decent points for that, and it certainly presents a unique character study.
I haven't seen this film in a long time, but after writing this review, I'd kind of like to view it again.....depressing or not.
two great performances
Birdy (Matthew Modine) is the weirdo kid in a working class Philadelphia neighborhood. Al Columbato (Nicolas Cage) becomes his friend. Birdy introduces Al to his love of pigeons. They're both sent to Vietnam. Birdy returns in psychological distress after a month MIA. Al returns after suffering wounds to his face. Birdy's doctor finds Al to help in his treatment.
These are two great performances. Matthew Modine transforms physically and also mentally. Cage is the conduit between the audience and Birdy. He's not necessarily in the easier role at the least. They're both equally amazing. This isn't a movie about big plot developments. It's watching the obsessive Birdy going deeper and deeper into the rabbit hole.
These are two great performances. Matthew Modine transforms physically and also mentally. Cage is the conduit between the audience and Birdy. He's not necessarily in the easier role at the least. They're both equally amazing. This isn't a movie about big plot developments. It's watching the obsessive Birdy going deeper and deeper into the rabbit hole.
Took me 25 yrs to get round to seeing this, and WOW!
I can't believe I took so long to get round to seeing this AMAZING FILM!
It captivated me from the start, beautifully filmed, powerful, sensitive, funny - Incredibly acted by Modine and Cage!
I would like to thank the reviewer that warned about the animal cruelty in 1 scene - I 'think' it was just after the stray dog scene, but I fast forwarded it a littler bit, so didn't seeing anything upsetting.
This film is a must see for any avid movie lover, and yes the ended was AWESOME!
10 out 10, and i'm going on to Amazon to buy a copy.
Enjoy!
It captivated me from the start, beautifully filmed, powerful, sensitive, funny - Incredibly acted by Modine and Cage!
I would like to thank the reviewer that warned about the animal cruelty in 1 scene - I 'think' it was just after the stray dog scene, but I fast forwarded it a littler bit, so didn't seeing anything upsetting.
This film is a must see for any avid movie lover, and yes the ended was AWESOME!
10 out 10, and i'm going on to Amazon to buy a copy.
Enjoy!
learning to fly (in the sky and in real life)
Alan Parker is a British film-maker that was capable of the worst (the boring "the commitments", the insipid "evita" as well as the best (the sordid "angel heart", the vibrating "Pink floyd: The Wall". This one, "Birdy" will surely rank among his best movies. He revives a myth, a desire that always shone in men: flying but not with a plane or an helicopter, just like Icare with real wings. This is what haunts a teenager's mind whose name is Birdy. This one devotes all his free time by inventing stratagems or ways so as to be able to fly in the sky. he also has an interest in birds' social life with their habits (it's not a fate that his name is Birdy because there's the word "bird" in it). Even if he didn't win his best friend's adherence concerning these odd likings, they succeeded in striking up a strong relationship. Above all, "birdy" is this: a story of a friendship between two teenagers brought up in a Philadelphia' popular area. They're sharing jobs, free time, girls before they were parted by the Vietnam war. Parker films this relationship with its joys, its sorrows in a hearty way and make the two actors friendly. "Birdy" is also a well-regulated movie where Parker knows how to sustain the interest in the past sequences as well as present sequences (Birdy's room hospital). Furthermore, there's not a sequence where one of the two main actors is stealing to the other, the spotlight. But the movie seems easy when it denounces the atrocities of war and its disastrous consequences on young people (Cage's long monologue with Modine in his arms towards the end of the movie). These sorrowful consequences are concrete (Cage's face full of bandages) and abstract (Modine has become dumb and stays immures in his silence). Nevertheless, emotion prevails in the end and you sympathize to the two teenagers' helpless after the war. A beautiful movie and the revelation of two great actors
Did you know
- TriviaNicolas Cage had two teeth removed (without anesthetic) for this role.
- GoofsAl calls Birdy "Al" (11:08)
- Crazy creditsAnimals: Perta ... Bird No. 9 Perta's Stunts ... Queepers Alfonso ... AS HIMSELF Cat ... Hobbie Dogs ... Sneaky, Willey, Ace, Prince, Tiger, Bo, Rudah, Chiggar, Tyko, Kelly, Red, Fantasy, Scooter. Seagull ... Jonathan Snake ... Monty Jungle Bird ... Horatio Pigeons ... No's. 1 to 84
- How long is Birdy?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Alas de libertad
- Filming locations
- Wildwood, New Jersey, USA(Atlantic City - Fairground)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $12,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,455,045
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $13,720
- Dec 25, 1984
- Gross worldwide
- $1,455,096
- Runtime
- 2h(120 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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