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Norman

Original title: Norman: The Moderate Rise and Tragic Fall of a New York Fixer
  • 2016
  • R
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
6.7K
YOUR RATING
Richard Gere in Norman (2016)
Norman Oppenheimer is a small time operator who befriends a young politician at a low point in his life. Three years later, when the politician becomes an influential world leader, Norman's life dramatically changes for better and worse.
Play trailer1:23
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Political DramaPolitical ThrillerDramaThriller

Norman Oppenheimer is a small time operator who befriends a young politician at a low point in his life. Three years later, when the politician becomes an influential world leader, Norman's ... Read allNorman Oppenheimer is a small time operator who befriends a young politician at a low point in his life. Three years later, when the politician becomes an influential world leader, Norman's life dramatically changes for better and worse.Norman Oppenheimer is a small time operator who befriends a young politician at a low point in his life. Three years later, when the politician becomes an influential world leader, Norman's life dramatically changes for better and worse.

  • Director
    • Joseph Cedar
  • Writer
    • Joseph Cedar
  • Stars
    • Richard Gere
    • Lior Ashkenazi
    • Michael Sheen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    6.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph Cedar
    • Writer
      • Joseph Cedar
    • Stars
      • Richard Gere
      • Lior Ashkenazi
      • Michael Sheen
    • 56User reviews
    • 99Critic reviews
    • 75Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos40

    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 1:23
    Teaser Trailer
    Official Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Official Theatrical Trailer
    Official Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Official Theatrical Trailer
    English Subtitles
    Clip 2:17
    English Subtitles
    English Subtitles
    Clip 1:37
    English Subtitles
    English Subtitles
    Clip 1:26
    English Subtitles
    English Subtitles
    Clip 1:05
    English Subtitles

    Photos23

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    Top cast97

    Edit
    Richard Gere
    Richard Gere
    • Norman Oppenheimer
    Lior Ashkenazi
    Lior Ashkenazi
    • Micha Eshel
    Michael Sheen
    Michael Sheen
    • Phillip Cohen
    Steve Buscemi
    Steve Buscemi
    • Rabbi Blumenthal
    Yehuda Almagor
    • Duby
    Neta Riskin
    Neta Riskin
    • Hanna
    Josh Charles
    Josh Charles
    • Arthur Taub
    Dan Stevens
    Dan Stevens
    • Bill Kavish
    Harris Yulin
    Harris Yulin
    • Jo Wilf
    Doval'e Glickman
    Doval'e Glickman
    • Ron Maor
    • (as Dov Glickman)
    Tali Sharon
    Tali Sharon
    • Naomi Eshel
    Charlotte Gainsbourg
    Charlotte Gainsbourg
    • Alexandra (Alex) Green
    Isaach De Bankolé
    Isaach De Bankolé
    • Jacques
    • (as Isaach De Bankole)
    Miranda Bailey
    Miranda Bailey
    • Taub's Assistant
    D.C. Anderson
    D.C. Anderson
    • Congressman Bob Easterly
    Andrea Cirie
    Andrea Cirie
    • BRBC Conference Moderator
    Scott Shepherd
    Scott Shepherd
    • Bruce Schwartz
    Bern Cohen
    Bern Cohen
    • Male Board Member 1
    • Director
      • Joseph Cedar
    • Writer
      • Joseph Cedar
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews56

    6.16.7K
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    Featured reviews

    5jmc4769

    Good swing, but a miss

    This movie definitely has some things going for it. It has an intelligent script and great acting by Richard Gere and the rest of the cast. But in the end I could not get past how annoying Norman is. In real life you couldn't stand to be around this type of person for more than five minutes. Yet he is in almost every scene. To make matters worse, we don't get any backstory for Norman and no scenes with his family and friends. His private life is a total mystery. We never even get to see him sitting down for a meal with his acquaintances. All we see is scene after scene where he is trying to manipulate someone for some advantage. And ultimately this becomes so annoying and monotonous that it doesn't even matter that Norman is doing it for altruistic reasons.
    6fromanvi

    4th chapter was so good and i liked the music

    Good film, first chapters might be boring but from the third i really liked it and richard gere was nice
    lor_

    Best post-matinée idol role & performance by Richard Gere

    When I see the term "The Fixer" I recall Alan Bates in the now-forgotten Frankenheimer film from the Bernard Malamud novel of that name. A more definitive portrait is limned by Richard Gere as an archetypal (or stereotypical) Jewish character in Joe Cedar's "Norman", a performance that is near-perfect and marks the full transition of Gere from his pretty-boy stardom of decades ago to great character actor.

    Casting gentiles in most of the major Jewish roles in this film should not be controversial, as certainly all recent Mafia epics have cast Brits, Irish and Australian actors in the Italian parts for the obvious reason that Italian actors, even De Niro, are tired of the ethnic gangster stereotype unless it's a comedy or spoof. Gere creates a memorable and unique character that avoids the obvious clichés.

    Just as in "Pretty Woman" he so ably played second-fiddle to his co-star Julia Roberts (in the role that made her a star) here Gere is actually overshadowed in the charisma department by his amazing Israeli co-star Lior Ashkenazi as Eshel, a minor Israeli politician befriended (for purely self-serving reasons) by Gere as Norman Oppenheinmer, Eshel later becoming his country's powerful prime minister.

    Norman is a finagler (I couldn't place the proper Yiddish word to describe him), with a compulsion to inveigle his way into people's good graces usually in the manner of a "cold call" handled in person, in order to make them beholden to him for future payoff. It's analogous to the premise behind Puzo's "The Godfather", in which Don Corleone does favors that ultimately will be paid back when the time is propitious, and is best described in the film's wonderful hand-drawn charts which Kevin Bacon-like link people together in complicated diagrams. Besides its obvious content, the film works on a different level to show the negative side of our era's current craze for "networking", a practice that has been enshrined as the cure-all for unemployment (or underemployment) at a certain level of society but which in this case involves extreme, insidious manipulation.

    Starting with buying the visiting Eshel an expensive pair of shoes as the Israeli visits New York City on government business (Isaach De Bankole as the shoe salesman is the first of numerous terrific small- role performances by instantly recognizable actors who usually have leading parts in movies), Norman compulsively fabricates far-fetched stories of his linkage to everybody while creating tenuous links in order to concoct complicated schemes, which he calls "Strategies" on his business card.

    He's a mysterious figure, always clad in his camel's hair overcoat and seemingly homeless as we never see him except in public places, usually on the phone via earphones pestering folks. On the surface he is a bore -the type one meets at a cocktail party or in the next seat on a plane and makes one wish to escape from his barrage of intrusive blather.

    But writer-director Cedar not only humanizes Norman but by the end of the film makes us see the good that results from his weird projects, even though Norman himself faces a tragic fate. A stumbling block for me to get into the picture was Cedar's rather forced and overly fanciful use of tropes from the school of "Magical Realism", often showing the characters, even as far away as one in NYC and the other in Israel, staged on the same set as if together, ultimately making much of the film seem like merely a fever dream hallucination in Norman's brain rather than actually occurring events.

    That "is it real?" aspect is already in the script by way of the constant prevarication and self-delusional assertions Norman makes, always exaggerating his own importance. He's not a liar per se, but as Kellyanne Conway has so vividly put it, a believer in alternate facts. When called on it, he tries to weasel his way out of a corner, but much of the film's effective black humor stems from the fact that the audience is privy to both sides of the story.

    Fate is a crutch that Cedar uses to keep the pot boiling but makes most of the movie's twists and turns too far-fetched to be believable. I would have much preferred an organic, unpredictable story line rather than the too-tight, very contrived approach, but that is the auteur's prerogative. These characters, especially Norman, have no degrees of freedom, while good (if conventional) writing is based on giving protagonists enough degrees of freedom to make choices and thereby create viable drama based on the consequences of their specific choices.

    In addition to Gere's thoughtful and always in character bravura performance and Ashkenazi's empathetic brilliance (he was great in an earlier Israeli film called "Footnote" that deserves to be more widely known), the spot roles so beautifully enacted include Charlotte Gainsbourg popping up and underplaying in chilling fashion as an Israeli prosecutor/investigator crucial to the story's payoff; Steve Buscemi cast against type as a duped Rabbi, who later shows the explosiveness fans have come to expect from the "Boardwalk Empire" star; Michael Sheeen, perfect as Norman's hapless and put-upon nephew; Harris Yulin as a tough NY power broker; and especially Hank Azaria, briefly astounding as Norman's unlikely doppelganger. This type of self-effacing ensemble is what the Screen Actor's Guild created its best "Cast in a Motion Picture" award to honor.
    8bastille-852-731547

    A Thoughtful, Playfully Sophisticated Reflection

    Joseph Cedar's English-language, U.S.-Israeli co-production starring Richard Gere does not disappoint. Gere does a great job playing the titular role, a Manhattan consultant who has a knack for enticing powerful people. He meets a prominent Israeli politician in New York, and ends up offering to buy him an expensive pair of shoes. Later, the man becomes Prime Minister of Israel, setting the stage for major conflict. The script in this film is excellent. It is both witty and sophisticated at the same time, perfectly blending complexity and playfulness. Such a blend also manifests itself in the film's tone, which is handled very well given the film's themes and subject matter. If there's one complaint I have about this film, it is that of the pacing: the four-act structure of the film could have been paced better, as the second and third acts seem to have relatively little substance relative to the rest of the film. Other than that fairly minor complaint, this is most certainly a great film. Definitely recommended. 8.5/10
    7Jaffe

    A Picture Doomed to Be Misunderstood and Therefore Underappreciated

    This is my first time posting a review, but I felt that this picture in particular needs the introduction that I can give to it:

    When initially asked if I would recommend this film I responded, "Ah, recommend? ... I don't think so." In retrospect, I think that it can be appreciated, provided that one understands the viewpoint of its Israeli writer/director.

    I'll digress briefly to address the elephant in the room: Richard Gere. I was initially offended that he was allowed to (and that he had the gall to) play a Jew, but he was actually very good in the role. Without chewing the scenery, he showed that he's a talented actor who can "just go into character," and for him "less is more."

    Now, there are two main points I think every viewer needs to know: First, it's a very Israeli movie (and that's what it is); you either know what that means or you simply do not. And, secondly, Israelis are looking for "the message" or "the lesson" of the film, which isn't clear, and most complain that "it has no plot." Non-Israelis, on the other hand, are left asking themselves if there are gaping holes in the film that are just not filled in, and thus find it "very confusing" or "totally unrealistic." I, however, understand what the director is going for. He's seeing Israeli politics through the eyes of 90% of Israelis (who all want pretty much the same thing: "to part with the Arabs"). Through that lens, he presents the image of an ideal Israeli political candidate who's actually capable of making a difference (i.e. "peace"), and when the wheels start moving to oust him, as they do in Israel with any successful politician, our attention is focused on the internal conflict of his "Diaspora Jewish businessman" vis-à-vis whether he can be altruistic enough, or just desperate enough, to realize the greater picture and appreciate the sincere relationship he has with this great scion, and perhaps to be ready to give up the short-lived glory he can finally reap from these events and even to fall on his own sword for the sake of the greater good.

    Once I realised what it was, I sat back with no vested interest in the outcome and just enjoyed it like a foibled fairytale (or a story submitted by a child) portrayed onscreen by an A-list cast.

    Without actively recommending it, I'm just telling the public what it is. A fourth-to-sixth grader's story (including that child's perception of reality and wishful thinking) presented by an A-list cast ... in which, if any of it were to happen then this is actually how it would play out. When you accept that this is the case, that you're missing nothing and that this is how Middle East politics actually plays out on the ground (that's right, you're not missing anything, this really is the circus of politics in Israel as it's portrayed in this film), then maybe you can sit back and allow yourself to enjoy it too.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Half of the film was shot in New York City and half of it in Jerusalem, Israel. The original poster for the movie showed the two main actors, Richard Gere and Lior Ashkenazi, standing back to back, with Gere in New York City and Ashkenazi in Jerusalem.
    • Quotes

      Norman Oppenheimer: There are two kinds of moguls: First kind is like a big ocean liner ship. Makes a lot of waves, a lot of noise, everybody sees it coming from miles away. Like Jo Wilf. I think your boss, Minister Maor, is actually... in his close circle of friends. of course. And then there is Arthur. Well, Arthur is more like a nuclear submarine. he's quiet, he's fast, he's young. Extremely sophisticated.

    • Connections
      References Exodus (1960)
    • Soundtracks
      Mi Sheberach
      Traditional

      Arranged by Raymond Goldstein

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Norman?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 9, 2017 (Israel)
    • Countries of origin
      • Israel
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Hebrew
    • Also known as
      • Oppenheimer Strategies
    • Filming locations
      • New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Blackbird
      • Cold Iron Pictures
      • Movie Plus productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,814,868
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $99,211
      • Apr 16, 2017
    • Gross worldwide
      • $6,217,567
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 58 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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