Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
John Cusack | ... | Craig Schwartz | |
Cameron Diaz | ... | Lotte Schwartz | |
Ned Bellamy | ... | Derek Mantini | |
Eric Weinstein | ... | Father at Puppet Show | |
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Madison Lanc | ... | Daughter at Puppet Show |
Octavia Spencer | ... | Woman in Elevator (as Octavia L. Spencer) | |
Mary Kay Place | ... | Floris | |
Orson Bean | ... | Dr. Lester | |
Catherine Keener | ... | Maxine Lund | |
K.K. Dodds | ... | Wendy | |
Byrne Piven | ... | Captain Mertin | |
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Judith Wetzell | ... | Tiny Woman |
John Malkovich | ... | John Horatio Malkovich | |
Kevin Carroll | ... | Cab Driver | |
Willie Garson | ... | Guy in Restaurant |
Puppeteer Craig Schwartz and animal lover and pet store clerk Lotte Schwartz are just going through the motions of their marriage. Despite not being able to earn a living solely through puppeteering, Craig loves his profession as it allows him to inhabit the skin of others. He begins to take the ability to inhabit the skin of others to the next level when he is forced to take a job as a file clerk for the off-kilter LesterCorp, located on the five-foot tall 7½ floor of a Manhattan office building. Behind one of the filing cabinets in his work area, Craig finds a hidden door which he learns is a portal into the mind of John Malkovich, the visit through the portal which lasts fifteen minutes after which the person is spit into a ditch next to the New Jersey Turnpike. Craig is fascinated by the meaning of life associated with this finding. Lotte's trips through the portal make her evaluate her own self. And the confident Maxine Lund, one of Craig's co-workers who he tells about the ... Written by Huggo
Being John Malkovich leaves you astounded. What happened in that dark theater? Twist and turn, one thing more fantastical than the next, this movie is 100 % UNIQUE. Even the introduction and the setting of the film are outlandish to say the least. The movie develops quickly, plummetting viewers into the warped world it creates; while the surroundings are strange, they are presented without leaving the audience convinced and I found that my questions about Malkovich's mysterious portal, such as "What happens if John Malkovich goes into his own portal?", were answered.
The directoral work in John Malkovich is quite interested at times as well. Seeing the world through John Malkovich's eyes is not an easy feat to accomplish, but is done tactfully.
However, it is the interactions between the characters that fortifies this film. Cuscack, completely smitten by Catherine Keener's character, finds that his love is unrequited. There are more twists in this story, but that's for you to find out, now isn't it? So be John Malkovich!