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| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
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Darcy Belsher | ... | Michael |
| Martin Cummins | ... | Kris | |
| Françoise Robertson | ... | Ryan | |
| Helen Shaver | ... | Sherry | |
| Nicholas Campbell | ... | Bruce | |
| Rene Auberjonois | ... | Tim | |
| Barry Pepper | ... | John | |
| Ryan Reynolds | ... | Red Shoes | |
| Richard C. Burton | ... | Tom Sellek (as Richard Burton) | |
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Raquel Meade | ... | Emmett |
| Brandy Ledford | ... | Ultimate Woman | |
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Barbara Lemarre | ... | Kendra |
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Ocean Hellman | ... | Michael's Mother |
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Silas Wind Radies | ... | Young Michael |
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Glen Marcoux | ... | Tracey |
Caught in the jagged downtown world of drugs, prostitutes and violence, three young artists lead tumultuous lives in desperate need of an overhaul. Relationships stumble as careers take flight. Support and friendship and slip into betrayal. For some, there is redemption. For others, death. The comedic, the pathetic, the talented and the ruined all walk the same raw streets in this gritty, sensitive and funny story of survival.
This film is a semi-autobiographical account of a period of time in Martin Cummins' (director/actor) life after his mother died. He's done a spectacular job of bringing this story to life in his first film.
A dark and violent movie, it follows Michael (played by Belsher, based on Cummins), in west Vancouver B.C., as he gets into drug use to escape his problems. His friend Kris (Cummins) encourages him in the drug use so he has some company. Kris has a girlfriend, Ryan, who finds the drugs a bit much to handle and ends up having to choose between the two friends. The ending was a total surprise and worth driving 6 hours to see.
All the actors did a great job of making the characters real and believable. I especially enjoyed Cummins dark/angry/violent portrayal of a man who is losing control of things.
A good portion of the cast was made up of actors Cummins had worked with on the television series 'Poltergeist: the Legacy' and previous Canadian t.v. shows. The part of Sherry the prostitute was written for Helen Shaver. She was hilarious! In an interview I saw before the film she said that she gets to let everything hang out. Boy did she! A side I had never seen and I'm not sure I want to see again. :)
If you get a chance to see 'We All Fall Down', please do!