Simone

Simone

By Andrew Niccol

  • Genre: Comedy
  • Release Date: 2002-08-23
  • Advisory Rating: PG-13
  • Runtime: 1h 57min
  • Director: Andrew Niccol
  • Production Company: Cine Condado Entertainment
  • Production Country: Puerto Rico
  • iTunes Price: USD 9.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
3/10
3
From 7 Ratings

Description

Critically acclaimed director Viktor Taransky (Academy award-winner Al Pacino - "The Godfather," "Scarface") has just lost his last shot at a comeback when his temperamental flesh and blood actress walked off his movie. Fired by his ex-wife and studio head, Taransky just lost any hope of recapturing his former life. But then computer genius Hank Aleno enters the picture. As his dying wish, Hank bequeaths software to Taransky that will change his life forever. Just a few key strokes and an overnight sensation is born: S1MØNE. S1MØNE is beautiful, she's talented, and she's virtually perfect in every way except one. She's not real. Suddenly, Taransky has a taste of the success he always craved and the world's most beloved star under his thumb. Or does he? Starring Academy Award-nominee and Golden Globe-winner Winona Ryder ("The Age of Innocence," "Girl, Interrupted"), and Rachel Roberts (TV's "Ugly Betty," TV's "Entourage").

Trailer

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Reviews

  • Three and a half stars

    3
    By nomanisan
    Simone is intelligent, creative, visually stunning, and relevant -- which makes its failure as entertaining science fiction disappointing. Director Andrew Niccol's previous successes with "Gattaca" and "The Truman Show" should have ensured a strong showing with this film about technological deception and Hollywood self-delusion. But the script is badly cliched and key characters feel like mere archetypes. The resulting efforts at parody feel contrived. Catherine Keener and Evan Rachel Wood perform their archetypes well enough (Keener exceptionally so). Winona Ryder is funny in a self-deprecating co-starring role as a difficult Hollywood diva. But Rachel Roberts, while attractive and seductive as a model, brings too little life to her virtual character Simone, and star Al Pacino is misused entirely. Pacino's technologically backward character implausibly masters a futuristic technology that is dropped in his lap, and the script forces the character to spend much of the movie monologuing. Watching the movie is at times like watching an audio podcast. Ultimately, the movie has important things to say -- but it fails to make them, or the characters, feel important. I still rate the film highly for its moments of brilliance -- its parodies of art films and vacuous co-stars, its depiction of easily seduced movie fans, its well-aimed shots at entertainment "news" media, and the visual polish of its set designs and its virtual star, Simone.
  • Very interesting

    5
    By Mr.Häl
    I simply love this movie.
  • rent?? c'mon!!

    5
    By johnlee횽
    Hope 2 purchase in hd… plz

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