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Anomalisa

  • 2015
  • R
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
77K
YOUR RATING
Anomalisa (2015)
A man struggles with his inability to connect with other people.
Play trailer2:02
22 Videos
99+ Photos
Adult AnimationStop Motion AnimationAnimationComedyDramaRomance

A man crippled by the mundanity of his life experiences something out of the ordinary.A man crippled by the mundanity of his life experiences something out of the ordinary.A man crippled by the mundanity of his life experiences something out of the ordinary.

  • Directors
    • Duke Johnson
    • Charlie Kaufman
  • Writer
    • Charlie Kaufman
  • Stars
    • David Thewlis
    • Jennifer Jason Leigh
    • Tom Noonan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    77K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Duke Johnson
      • Charlie Kaufman
    • Writer
      • Charlie Kaufman
    • Stars
      • David Thewlis
      • Jennifer Jason Leigh
      • Tom Noonan
    • 250User reviews
    • 397Critic reviews
    • 88Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 24 wins & 79 nominations total

    Videos22

    Trailer #1
    Trailer 2:02
    Trailer #1
    Anomalisa
    Clip 1:08
    Anomalisa
    Anomalisa
    Clip 1:08
    Anomalisa
    Anomalisa
    Clip 0:45
    Anomalisa
    Anomalisa: Hall
    Clip 1:08
    Anomalisa: Hall
    Anomalisa: Landing
    Clip 0:45
    Anomalisa: Landing
    Anomalisa: Meeting Lisa
    Clip 0:46
    Anomalisa: Meeting Lisa

    Photos106

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    + 102
    View Poster

    Top cast3

    Edit
    David Thewlis
    David Thewlis
    • Michael Stone
    • (voice)
    Jennifer Jason Leigh
    Jennifer Jason Leigh
    • Lisa Hesselman
    • (voice)
    Tom Noonan
    Tom Noonan
    • Everyone else
    • (voice)
    • Directors
      • Duke Johnson
      • Charlie Kaufman
    • Writer
      • Charlie Kaufman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews250

    7.277.2K
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    Featured reviews

    Dee-Tay0909

    Would have been a great short film

    I am a huge Charlie Kaufman fan, and was very excited to get the chance to see this film at the Denver Film Festival this week. However, this film was extremely disappointing. The plot was quite boring and the film really just seemed to be a character study of loneliness and mental health deterioration. It would have made a great short film, but it was entirely too long for such a low-quality plot. The ending left me extremely unsatisfied.

    However, I did enjoy the animation, sound, and other technical aspects of the film. But I'd have to rate this 5 stars and place it next to down there next to Schenectady, New York as one of my least favorite Charlie Kaufman films. Apparently I prefer films he writes but does not direct. I'm ready for another Spike Jonze collaboration!
    5stewart-62

    Puzzled by The Acclaim

    This is a small film – by which I mean it's not a great one. This is, of course, in contrast to all the critical praise which has been heaped on it. The word "masterpiece" has featured in many reviews, but I can't agree. I'd stress that I'm a huge Charlie Kaufman fan and my anticipation on going to see the film was equally as big as my disappointment after I'd done so. So what's the problem? I think it's the smallness of the story;yes it's about alienation,yes it's clever, yes the sex scene is achingly real and uncomfortable, but this movie has only a few points to make – mostly about alienation and the "otherness" of people – and while it makes them well, they don't amount to a decent movie. Thinking about it afterwards – and puzzled by the praise it has received and disconcerted by my own disappointment – I realised that if this movie has been made with human actors it simply wouldn't get the same sort of critical acclaim, in fact, it would be deemed dull, dull, dull. The thing which lifts it out of the ordinary – but not into the extraordinary – is the fact that it's told via animation. I urge anyone who loves the movie to try and imagine sitting through the same script acted by real people – it would be achingly boring.
    7namashi_1

    Brave & Depressing!

    There's no other to say it: 'Anomalisa' is beyond the ordinary, its something like you've never seen before (well, almost). Oscar-Winner Charlie Kaufman Writes & Directs this unusual story, with sensitivity, although the final-act turns up bland. More on that later...

    'Anomalisa' Synopis: A man crippled by the Mundanity of his life experiences something out of the ordinary.

    'Anomalisa' is a story about a man stuck in monotony & depression. Kaufman along-with Co-Director Duke Johnson, delivers a sad story about facing repetition in life. And they begin the story beautifully & it remains great even after its protagonist forms a relationship with a "different soul". BUT, the final-act is a downer. The narrative falls apart & even though Kaufman's message comes across, it doesn't leave an impact. The open-ending also doesn't work. In short, 'Anomalisa' works wonders, until it falls apart in its penultimate moments.

    Kaufman's Writing is truly terrific in the first-hour, but as mentioned prominently before, this story deserved a better end! Kaufman & Duke Johnson's Direction is skilled, as the stop-motion adult animation, is brilliantly done.

    David Thewlis, Jennifer Jason Leigh & Tom Noonan deliver mesmerizing vocal performances. Leigh, especially, is magnificent. After 'The Hateful Eight', Leigh triumphs once again with a super act in 'Anomalisa'.

    On the whole, Despite some faults, 'Anomalisa' deserves a watch for its brave approach & its perfectly done depressing setting.
    7jadepietro

    Irrational Man

    (RATING: ☆☆☆½ out of 5)

    THIS FILM IS RECOMMENDED.

    IN BRIEF: A serious treatise on loneliness that, while making some intriguing insights, does ramble on and on.

    GRADE: B-

    SYNOPSIS: On a business trip, a lonely man searches for love among the ruins of his ordinary life.

    I begin this review with a quote from Immanuel Kant: "Happiness is not an ideal of reason, but of imagination". This sums up the film, Anomalisa very succinctly. The film is an imaginative journey into the mind of a sad man who has lost all reason, living in a world where everyone is uniformly the same, in voice and appearance.

    Nominated for a 2015 Oscar for Best Animated Film (and finally receiving wider distribution nearly 4 months later), Charlie Kauffman's stop-motion film has an odd yet intoxicating allure. It is a character study of a lonely man content to live within his own illusions, with reality just outside his grasp.

    David Thewlis voices the character of Michael Stone, a man unable to connect with others. Michael settles for his cloistered existence. His responsibilities to his family and his job ties him down. He is a successful author and keynote speaker, discussing self-help techniques to the masses without the ability to help himself in his private life. On a business trip, he meets various strangers (all voiced by Tom Noonan). A feeling of hopelessness overpowers him. But it isn't until he finally hears a different voice in the form of Lisa Hesselman (Jennifer Jason Leigh) that he finally awakens to life and all of its wondrous possibilities. He nicknames her Anomalisa (a cross between an anomaly and Lisa herself). Their encounter becomes the crux of the film as MIchael's sanity slowly becomes unhinged, in the most literal sense.

    Writer / director Charlie Kauffman creates a dreamlike film that is visually captivating but leaves many questions unanswered. (Sharing directing credit is also Duke Johnson.) With its deep philosophical bent, Mr. Kauffman's screenplay allows for too much intellectualizing and grand- standing of the human condition, interfering with the beauty of his simple tale.

    The film is beautifully staged with wonderful detailed sets by the production team of John Joyce and Huy Vu and a haunting score by the reliable Carter Burwell that adds to the melancholia. The film's initial premise is intriguing, like experiencing a profound lecture or reading a compelling essay or poem, yet the level of satisfaction will differ with each viewer. Does one like metaphysical debates about the importance of life, happiness, and the general state of the human condition? Is it time well spent or wasted on thought-provoking meaningless observations? Is the glass half-empty, half-full, or not really there at all? Was I caught in a freshman class of Philosophy 101? (As you might tell, my feelings were decidedly mixed.)

    While I enjoyed the film's animation and the atmospheric toll on the characters, this wisp of a plot edged on monotony, even though the film dealt with some provocative concepts. Technically, the stop-motion aspects are quite effective and achieve a graceful elegance. (Midway, the film takes on a more surreal quality which I personally found more compelling before it reverses itself once again.) But the overall script needed more risks into a wider range of bizarre and weird images that are capable within this animated genre. Instead, Kauffman and Co. settle for a tame strangeness as it trips over in its own wordiness and drawn-out ramblings.

    No doubt this film is a labor of love and, on that, it should be commended. Anomalisa is the type of film project that one can greatly admire, but love never became part of the equation for this reviewer. Like the character of Michael, I just could not connect emotionally. I remained an avid observer and outsider throughout this movie-going experience, with true happiness just out of my grasp as well.

    Visit my blog at: www.dearmoviegoer.com

    ANY COMMENTS: Please contact me at: jadepietro@rcn.com
    8evanston_dad

    Kaufman's Bleak Outlook on Life and Human Relationships

    Every time I see a Charlie Kaufman film I'm reminded how fearless he is at examining the human condition and why I need to put a lot of time in between watching his movies.

    In "Anomalisa," his Academy-Award nominated animated film, David Thewlis and especially Jennifer Jason Leigh do tremendous voice work as an emotionally ill minor celebrity and the shy, awkward woman with whom he enjoys a one-night stand while at a conference at which he is the speaker. The film is an examination of middle-aged male discontent and loneliness, a subject a younger version of me was always impatient with and which the 41-year-old version of me now finds hits uncomfortably close to home. Kaufman creates a sad character who has many unpleasant tendencies but isn't necessarily a completely unpleasant man, and allows us to see how this one night in the man's life and his approach to human relationships is a stand-in for his entire adult life and the driving force behind his depression.

    As in his masterpiece, "Synecdoche, New York," Kaufman refuses to give in to the convention of happy, or at least hopeful, endings, and suggests that it is possible to live an entire life being utterly miserable if you don't possess the resources to do otherwise, a terrifying idea to anyone who has struggled with depression, anxiety, or even just prolonged bouts of general malaise. In so many Hollywood movies about unhappy people, the unhappy people just need the emotional connection to that one special person that shakes them out of their funk and changes everything around for them. One of the things I liked best about "Anomalisa" is its suggestion that, while those special people really do exist, happiness in any one person is something that has to come from inside and isn't going to be imposed on one by another. It isn't comfortable to think about the possibility of life being a long series of missed opportunities, but it feels honest.

    Grade: A-

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Anomalisa (2015) was crowd-funded through Kickstarter.com. In early development, the film was planned to be only a short film, about 40 minutes in length.
    • Goofs
      When Michael hears Lisa's voice for the first time, he dresses up in a hurry and does not put on any underwear. Later, when he goes back to his room and takes his pants off, he's wearing boxers.
    • Quotes

      Michael Stone: Sometimes there's no lesson. That's a lesson in itself.

    • Connections
      Featured in 73rd Golden Globe Awards (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Girls Just Want to Have Fun
      Written by Robert Hazard

      Italian translation by Stefano Tomaselli

      Vocals by Jennifer Jason Leigh

      Used by permission of Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 11, 2016 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Facebook (United Kingdom)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Аномаліза
    • Production companies
      • Paramount Animation
      • HanWay Films
      • Harmonius Claptrap
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $8,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,759,286
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $135,222
      • Jan 3, 2016
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,659,286
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • Datasat
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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