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Kinsey
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Kinsey (2004) -- A look at the life of Alfred Kinsey (Neeson), a pioneer in the area of human sexuality research, whose 1948 publication "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male" was one of the first recorded works that saw science address sexual behavior.
Kinsey (2004) -- Home Video Preview
Kinsey (2004) -- A look at the life of Alfred Kinsey (Neeson), a pioneer in the area of human sexuality research, whose 1948 publication "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male" was one of the first recorded works that saw science address sexual behavior.
Kinsey (2004) -- AllTrailers.net - Trailer (Flash)

Overview

User Rating:
7.3/10   18,849 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Down 6% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writer (WGA):
Bill Condon (written by)
Contact:
View company contact information for Kinsey on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
13 January 2005 (Australia) more
Genre:
Tagline:
Let's talk about sex.
Plot:
A look at the life of Alfred Kinsey (Neeson), a pioneer in the area of human sexuality research, whose 1948 publication "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male" was one of the first recorded works that saw science address sexual behavior. full summary | full synopsis
Awards:
Nominated for Oscar. Another 11 wins & 26 nominations more
NewsDesk:
(61 articles)
Peter Sarsgaard: The Hollywood Interview
 (From The Hollywood Interview. 21 December 2009, 9:12 AM, PST)

Film Independent's New Board Directors
 (From Deadline Hollywood. 4 December 2009, 11:26 AM, PST)

User Reviews:
A Politically Pointed Re-Creation of a Past that Could Be Prologue more (183 total)

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)

Liam Neeson ... Alfred Kinsey

Laura Linney ... Clara McMillen

Chris O'Donnell ... Wardell Pomeroy

Peter Sarsgaard ... Clyde Martin

Timothy Hutton ... Paul Gebhard

John Lithgow ... Alfred Seguine Kinsey

Tim Curry ... Thurman Rice

Oliver Platt ... Herman Wells

Dylan Baker ... Alan Gregg

Julianne Nicholson ... Alice Martin

William Sadler ... Kenneth Braun
John McMartin ... Huntington Hartford

Veronica Cartwright ... Sara Kinsey
Kathleen Chalfant ... Barbara Merkle
Heather Goldenhersh ... Martha Pomeroy
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Additional Details

MPAA:
Rated R for pervasive sexual content, including some graphic images and descriptions.
Runtime:
118 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Cole Porter wrote the song "Too Darn Hot" for the Broadway musical "Kiss Me Kate," which premiered in 1948, the same year as the publication of Alfred Kinsey's book "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male". The song contains the lyrics "According to the Kinsey report / ev'ry average man you know / much prefers to play his favorite sport / when the temperature is low." The Ella Fitzgerald recording of this song is played on the soundtrack. When MGM produced its movie version, Kiss Me Kate (1953), the same year as the publication of Kinsey's "Sexual Behavior in the Human Female", the film's censors changed the lyrics to "According to the weather report...," a sign of how much more controversial Kinsey's work was after the second book than the first. more
Goofs:
Miscellaneous: When Kinsey and his wife are in the woods in New England one afternoon, they hear a whippoorwill, but the whippoorwill is a nocturnal bird. more
Quotes:
Effete Man in Gay Bar: [referring to Kinsey] Mary here says he's from the University of Indiana and she'd like to interview me about my "sex history".
Effete Man's Friend: Tell him to stick around and watch.
more
Movie Connections:
Featured in The Kinsey Report: Sex on Film (2005) (V) more
Soundtrack:
Top of the Plaza more

FAQ

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54 out of 74 people found the following review useful.
A Politically Pointed Re-Creation of a Past that Could Be Prologue, 3 December 2004
Author: noralee from Queens, NY

Just as the focus of "Kinsey" thought he was being objective about a topic that had only been treated subjectively, the film is not an objective bio-pic.

For the first half of the movie, the exquisite production design, costumes and make-up effectively recreate middle America before World War II, as Kinsey's rigid upbringing and equally rigid scientific life as a zoologist are established.

Laura Linney as first his student then his wife adds an earthy and warm element and her excellent acting adds womanliness beyond the script to the movie that is missing otherwise. Their gradual move into teaching and studying sexuality is shown convincingly in contrast to the prigs around them, with, ironically surely, Tim Curry playing his puritanical academic rival.

Accurate details include showing and reading from a popular marriage manual, Theodoor H. van de Velde's "Ideal Marriage: Its Physiology and Technique;" when I ran a used book sale at my local synagogue we would get many unread copies donated from now elderly couples who had received it as part of pre-marital rabbinical counseling and it was hilarious how sexist and inaccurate it was.

But writer/director Bill Condon takes considerable interpretive leaps as he moves on to "the inner circle," as T. Coraghessan Boyle terms it in his fictionalized interpretation, when Kinsey hires, trains, works and lives closely with male assistants for his first research project on men.

Peter Sarsgaard is the stand out in the trio, as outstanding as his role in "Shattered Glass" and as all holds barred as in "The Center of the World." But his characterization leans toward a cavalier attitude towards women that is emblematic of this film until literally the last minute. I don't see why his character would be jealous to the point of fisticuffs of the attentions Timothy Hutton's flirtatious assistant would be paying to his wife when he seemed to condescend to marriage only for appearance's sake anyway.

The film dwells on gay men and skips through the research done to produce the second tome on women, pointing out mostly Kinsey's corrective biological information, therefore gliding over how it was the revelations about women that shocked the nation and led to difficult political and other consequences, though Margaret Sanger and Emma Goldman had promulgated similar information about women decades earlier (and had been hounded out of the country for their efforts). The Kinsey Institute's FAQ on their Web site point out the active partnership of female research assistants for this work, who simply don't exist in the film. (And the Congressional investigations of foundations in the 1950's didn't just focus on the Rockefeller Foundation's funding of Kinsey, but they haven't yet posted their correctives on their Web site.)

Similarly, as Kinsey is shown taking the leap from taxonomy to adviser as an avatar of the coming sexual revolution, the psychological component of relationships, let alone sex, only comes up once such that Liam Neeson's characterization ultimately seems naive. But Condon is more interested in the political component, as he clearly sees a similar tide of conservative criticism rising across the land again.

One also gets the feeling that someone either read the script or saw a working print of the film and had to gently point out to Condon that women simply get short shrift, so suddenly an extremely poignant coda is added, with Lynn Redgrave as a very moving interviewee on how Kinsey's work affected her life directly.

The aging make-up and cinematography are beautiful in indicating the passage of time, matching seasonal passings and making early discussions seem to have been documented in black and white.

The casting of the many research subjects is wonderfully varied and the New York metropolitan area locations, recognizable only to the cognoscenti, stand in very well for varied cities, academic and sylvan locales.

The closing credits are surrounded by fun period songs and zoological interactions.

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Kinsey was a fraud noe7
To the bisexuals on here - innate or did you become bi? yarrum2009
My teacher showed us this movie in high school lazycrazykz
Pure Propaganda--Nothing about Kinsey's Pedophilic Experiments with Kids montag813
Boy scout RW-Anni
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