| Index | 4 reviews in total |
26 out of 51 people found the following review useful:
Why, 18 March 2006
![]()
Author:
jacksonfire7 from United States
The acting and directing were great, but most of the stories themselves
were boring, uncomfortable, and pointless (a bad combination). I think
I wouldn't have been disappointed with the film if the synopsis on the
DVD, instead of saying "hard hitting" would say "attempts to be hard
hitting".
The exceptions were "A Whole New Day" (Gandolfini), and "New Year's
Day" (Knightley) which were both entertaining. A gave "New Year's Day"
a 7 below because it was the only one that made me laugh. Since these
are separate stories I'll rank them independently.
6 for "A Whole New Day"; 4 for "Euston Road"; 7 for "New Year's Eve"; 5
for "Standing Room Only"; 5.5 for "Bangers"; it is very boring and
uncomfortable but gave me some insight; 4 for "Sniper 470"
Short cuts, 11 June 2008
![]()
Author:
jotix100 from New York
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
An interesting concept, presenting several shorts to make a full length
feature. The tone of most of the vignettes is an ironic one. Viewed as
a whole, the stories go from interesting to just OK.
"Bangers", directed by Andrew Upton, shows a woman going into insanity.
Cate Blanchett is amazing in giving life to this "lost soul". Even
though it is one of the shortest stories, it is one of the ones that
really make an impact.
"A Whole New Day", by William Garcia, is priceless. A man awakes on the
floor of an empty apartment. He and his wife have a tempestuous
relationship. His only way of communication is his cell phone. He uses
to call his wife, who is an unhappy woman, made even sorer by his
disappearance. When a young woman comes to check the empty apartment,
that she evidently wants to rent, the man goes ballistic. How dares she
to even think about it. The last scene reveals the secret. James
Gandolfini is perfect as the loud mouth.
"Standing Room Only" makes a lot of sense. A few hopefuls decide to
come early to claim their places in the back of the theater to see the
hit play. There are only eight possible fortunate people admitted. An
old lady with her dog makes an appearance to stand in line. She would
be the last one to be admitted, but little does she know the others
will ask for the eight tickets available. At the end of the
performance, as the cast comes out of the stage door, a revelation
occurs. Michael Gambon, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Hugh Jackman,
Joanna Lumley, are seen in this fun story directed by Deborra-Lee
Furness, who is Mrs. Jackman in real life.
There is another story about a supermarket that is not given credit by
IMDb. In it, Ileana Douglas, Daryl Hannah and Jeff Goldblum, among
others are brought together. This one was the weakest story since it
relies on name dropping and inside jokes.
Col Spector's "New Year's Eve" was perhaps the longest of the stories.
It shows the guests of a party at a private home in London. Kira
Knightly is at the center of the story as a precocious young woman
interested in talking to an older guest.
Tom Stappard's "Euston Road" about a con man has its moments. Paul
Bethany makes the best out of his character.
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Don't bother, 2 July 2009
![]()
Author:
kimdino-1 from United Kingdom
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
"Supermarket" is a waste of time. I think it's supposed to be a comedy
but the hopeful/has-been meeting a real star just falls flat with
little else left. The slapstick routine with an incompetent trolley
girl would have been better left out altogether. Good editing would
have left this at less than two minutes and it still would have been
dead. (0 points)
"New years eve" is, I suppose, a good example of a shaggy dog story.
Pointless and doesn't go anywhere. (0 points)
"Bangers" works as an illustration of mental illness but is still
fairly weak. This is where I started to award points. (5 points)
"A whole new day" falls flat almost from the start as it's based on
such a ridiculous premise (she took everything, even the paint off the
walls?) Though there is a slight element of entertainment value. (4
points)
"Euston Rd" has some merit. I could almost believe that this was done
as a five minute short and the rest was added as padding to attempt to
make a feature length. (7 points)
"Standing room only" is just plain silliness at work. Though there are
plenty of bits to elicit a chuckle. (5 points)
"The same" is just plain sick. Freaks are only allowed to look at other
freaks, what sick mind allowed this in here? I gave a massive point
deduction for this one.
"Sniper 470" was not on my disc. I found it by googling and watched it
online. Why was it removed as this was definitely the strongest item.
If you are planning to see "Stories of Lost Souls" make sure you get a
copy that contains "Sniper 470".
10 out of 24 people found the following review useful:
Pointless, 12 June 2005
![]()
Author:
HMVincent from Berkeley, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The stories are (1) "A Whole New Day" with James Gandolfini; (2)
"Euston Road" with Paul Bettany; (3) "Standing Room Only" with Hugh
Jackman, Michael Gambon, et al.; (4) "New Year's Eve" with Keira
Knightley and other more interesting people; (5) "Sniper 470" with
Billy Boyd; (6) "Bangers" with Cate Blanchett.
These are all made very well, but they are pointless. When each ends,
you ask, "But what was that all ABOUT." I can see a case for "Sniper
470" and for "Bangers." In "A Whole New Day," Gandolfini's character
wakes up with a hangover, in his own apartment that's been emptied of
family, furniture, and decoration. His cell phone works, but he can't
call his wife, because she, in their stuffed home with screaming kids,
is calling around looking for him. The story looks like it will turn
Twilight Zoney, but very soon we learn the boring reason for it all.
In "Euston Road," con man Bettany invites a gullible mark to make seven
guesses as to why the con man has no money. The mark bites, the con man
wins, the end.
"Standing Room Only" has no dialogue. You see people line up for a
stage show, and one character gets in a snit because she can't get one
of the last tickets. Later, after the show, the people who were in line
meet up outside the backstage door, and take pictures of each other. A
trick is revealed. You will know what the trick is long beforehand,
because of the heaviness of heavy makeup.
In "New Year's Eve," a shallow man gets a comeuppance. However, others
deserving the same are not touched.
"Sniper 470" is a long piece, or at least it feels long, with Billy
Boyd as the title character and no one else is in view. He is a sniper
in space during an interplanetary conflict, and most of the short shows
what he does during his actionless days in weightless space. The
boredom leads nicely into a terrifying (for him) ending.
"Bangers" shows a Cate Blanchett's character preparing bangers and mash
for herself and her mother, all the while talking to the cat and
showing that she is coming apart at the seams. I would give Ms.
Blanchett an award for this one - she is utterly convincing.
| Plot summary | Plot synopsis | Ratings |
| Official site | Main details | Your user reviews |
| Your vote history |