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Mr. Nobody (2013)

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Average Rating: N/A
Critic Reviews: 3
Fresh: 2 | Rotten: 1

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User Ratings: 13,744

My Rating

Movie Info

A young boy stands on a station platform. The train is about to leave. Should he go with his mother or stay with his father? An infinity of possibilities rise from this decision. As long as he doesn't choose, anything is possible. Every life deserves to be lived. (c) Magnolia

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All Critics (16) | Top Critics (3) | Fresh (11) | Rotten (5)

This big-budget English-language co-production shows that Europeans can compete in the sci-fi realm where high production values are king.

October 28, 2013 Full Review Source: Hollywood Reporter
Hollywood Reporter
Top Critic IconTop Critic

While Mr. Nobody contains some truly moving scenes, it eventually starts to try your concentration when you suspect all the space/time continuum shuffling may never become more than the sum of its parts.

April 4, 2011 Full Review Source: Globe and Mail
Globe and Mail
Top Critic IconTop Critic

A film that has a beating heart underneath its messy -- though breathtakingly designed -- exterior.

April 4, 2011 Full Review Source: Variety
Variety
Top Critic IconTop Critic

Too strange for wide release, too provocative and arresting to sit on the shelf

October 29, 2013 Full Review Source: McClatchy-Tribune News Service
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

This sprawling, ambitious sci-fi epic has a keen visual sense and a genuine interest in its deep topics.

October 29, 2013 Full Review Source: Oregonian
Oregonian

The only truly graspable notion the film can be said to put forth is one of increasingly tedious sci-fi-romantic genre busy-ness.

October 28, 2013 Full Review Source: Slant Magazine
Slant Magazine

Jaco van Dormael's most ambitious film to date is a mess and a miracle at the same time.

October 28, 2013 Full Review Source: Screen International
Screen International

The aptly titled Nobody is just a white ball bouncing around the roulette wheel, as likely to land on this number as the next. It's fun to watch "Mr. Nobody" go round and round, but where it lands doesn't really matter to us.

October 28, 2013 Full Review Source: Madison Movie
Madison Movie

Messy but intriguing science-fiction film.

October 28, 2013 Full Review Source: Ozus' World Movie Reviews
Ozus' World Movie Reviews

Most viewers will have settled into a state of detached admiration. In the end, Mr. Nobody's title is simply too apt.

September 30, 2013 Full Review Source: The Dissolve
The Dissolve

'Mr. Nobody' jumps around in a rather haphazard way, so it seems too chaotic most of the time. It's creative, but quite perplexing.

September 29, 2013 Full Review Source: ReelTalk Movie Reviews
ReelTalk Movie Reviews

Both overblown and half-baked, too long and not edited enough, Mr. Nobody describes exactly the kind of audience it will likely get.

September 27, 2013 Full Review Source: The Playlist
The Playlist

I relate to most movies by thinking about my past. Mr. Nobody has me evaluating my future.

June 27, 2011 Full Review Source: Screen Junkies

Van Dormael's almost avant-garde modus operandi cements the movie's place as a love-it-or-hate-it proposition.

January 14, 2011 Full Review Source: Reel Film Reviews
Reel Film Reviews

This is thought provoking without pretentiousness, full of ideas and passion that deserves a wide audience...Giving oneself over to the film is a pleasure that's not soon to be repeated.

September 2, 2010 Full Review Source: Filmfest
Filmfest

Expect the unexpected. Try to answer the unanswerable question that writer-director Van Dormael poses. It is a worthwhile exercise.

July 28, 2010 Full Review Source: Jam! Movies
Jam! Movies

Audience Reviews for Mr. Nobody

Dormael's ambition, though appealing, moves dangerously towards pretentiousness as he attempts to concoct this intricate, convoluted plot - which bears many unnecessary elements that end up bloating it into a flawed, overlong structure that lacks a clear focus.
August 4, 2013
blacksheepboy

Super Reviewer

OVERVIEW:

A drop of rain falls on a piece of paper and smudges the phone number (belonging to a girl named Anna) written on it. The number gets erased and so does any trace of Anna. The narrator of the story, Nemo Nobody, aged 118 explains to the journalist interviewing him, "Do you wanna know why I lost Anna? Because 2 months earlier, an unemployed Brazilian boiled an egg"!

Confounding? Not half as what this extremely cerebral film has to offer! Jaco Van Dormael, the Belgian filmmaker who didn't make too many films in his career had earlier astonished us with his excellent "Toto Le Heros" (1991) (http://gokhaleaditya.blogspot.in/2011/11/toto-le-heros.html) about an old man recalling his tragic childhood and surviving with the sole goal of vengeance for his loss and often confusing reality with fantasy. "Mr. Nobody" provides for a heady cocktail of this earlier Dormael film and some other films, particularly "Donnie Darko", "The Fountain" and "The Butterfly Effect". Only "The Butterfly Effect" is more like an entertaining popcorn fantasy that doesn't go deep into the Science of it, unlike "Donnie Darko". "Mr. Nobody" is akin to "Donnie Darko", but not plot-wise. Like "Donnie Darko", it is one of those rare films that is a work of fiction built around existing scientific principles of Physics and Physical Cosmology.

[img]https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-o78ORtm-1as/T1oERWVQSYI/AAAAAAAACOU/NKoE_xGxobM/s656/vlcsnap-2012-03-05-22h15m21s176.jpg[/img]

PLOT:

The year is 2092. It is the age of 'quasi-immortality'. Mortality is a thing of the past. So is sex! The 118 years old Nemo Nobody (Jared Leto, brilliant, but a tad hammy) is the last mortal on earth. He appears to be confused.....keeps telling a shrink with a painted face that he is 34! Later, tells a journalist (Daniel Mays) that he is "Mr. Nobody" and that he "doesn't exist"! Upon probing by the journalist, Mr. Nobody starts narrating a strange tale of his supposed past right from his childhood (age 9) through his teen years (age 15) to his adulthood (age 34). But the story isn't straightforward as it should be....there appear to be multiple threads; multiple lives, multiple realities...each with its own love interest for Nemo!

[img]https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-_9b-90CALSI/T1oERnlLDtI/AAAAAAAACOk/xwDY_AENH1Y/s656/vlcsnap-2012-03-05-22h08m29s151.jpg[/img]

There's one thread in which Nemo grows up with his mother who marries a man, whose daughter Anna becomes the object of Nemo's affection. Then there is another in which Nemo grows up with his crippled father and becomes romantically involved with Elise, a girl who also has emotional problems! And then there is the third thread in which Nemo marries Jean, merely out of a whim! These stories branch out into sub-stories, involving one outlandish adventure on the Planet Mars where Nemo travels to scatter his wife's ashes!! Or that freaky universe which appears to be dominated by argyle patterns and Nemo is guided by signs all around him! The journalist is confused, of course; doesn't know what to believe! Yet Nemo jokes...."(in those days) Most of the time, nothing happened. Like a French movie"!!

[img]https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-8_SMM9lS28Q/T1oESGLz9vI/AAAAAAAACOg/_sRCb2FqpiQ/s656/vlcsnap-2012-03-05-22h18m21s180.jpg[/img]

So what really happened with Nemo? Did he live all those pasts? Are any of those stories real, or figments of his imagination? The fact as we know it, is that all time is irreversible. It moves in one direction. But does it really? Does Nemo have the power to alter the course of time...?

[img]https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-koxYfgIU2XI/T1oETcxEKyI/AAAAAAAACO8/ypCY9M0-gqo/s656/vlcsnap-2012-03-06-16h28m16s53.jpg[/img]

ANALYSIS/REVIEW:

A LOT of questions pop up while watching this film which is almost impossible to grasp in the first sitting. While Dormael drops plenty of clues in the form of dialog and explanations of various scientific theories in order to enable us to understand what he is getting at, it is still quite a task to put together this difficult film! We can gather some hints in the first viewing, but a second viewing can shed some more light on certain things we may easily miss in the first viewing! The 34 year old Nemo (in one of his many pasts!) is a scientist and an anchor for a TV show and is seen explaining to an audience, the principles of Entropy, The arrow of time, The Butterfly Effect, the Innate fear, The Big Bang, The Big Crunch and a lot of other theories that the film's plot is based upon! We are supposed to infer our own interpretation of the film by tying these theories to whatever happens in Nemo's life! This device reminds one of "Donnie Darko" (The Director's Cut) where some intertiles from a text are interspersed in the narrative to hint at what exactly was happening in the film! There are at least a couple of mentions of The Butterfly Effect (the theory, not the film!) in "Chaos Theory" which is the sensitive dependence on initial conditions; where a small change at one place in a nonlinear system can result in large differences to a later state (Source: Wikipedia). To further stress on this effect, there is also an example given in the form of an incident in one of Nemo's pasts....the aforementioned incident which appears in the first line of this review!

[img]https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-YeqRMlP21wQ/T1oEPH0W5gI/AAAAAAAACN0/BChDR1Ef14I/s656/vlcsnap-2012-03-05-21h47m02s83.jpg[/img]

But this film isn't really about time travel and altering the past seeking a better future. On a broad level, I think it is about choice and NOT making it! When faced with a choice, as long as you "don't choose", there are infinite possibilities, infinite universes which have their own ends...the theories of Big Bang and Big Crunch are transported to a personal and emotional level in a unique fictional narrative that is unparalleled, the similarities with "Donnie Darko" and "The Butterfly Effect" notwithstanding! A Chess move is quoted to give an example, the 'Zugzwang': "The only viable move...is NOT to move"! The film also follows a tree-structure with 'branched' narratives representing the multiple threads, further branching out into sub-branches of multiple choices (or lack thereof...of making any!).

[img]https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-NAgeDxc1-q8/T1oEO_vZXnI/AAAAAAAACNw/M0b3z-d9DL4/s656/vlcsnap-2012-03-05-21h54m54s152.jpg[/img]

But ultimately amidst all the scientific mumbo-jumbo, this film has a heart....and literally so, as it explores the protagonist's emotional ups and downs...the trauma of the separation of the parents, having to "choose" who to live with; the teenage romance(s), the heartbreaks, the desire for a good family life, kids, the works; these emotions come into play across narratives too. It is the emotional thread that binds all the branches together, and the manifestation of this is seen in some scenes in which Nemo appears to have memories of another reality in his "current reality"! So what is it exactly? Does Jaco Van Dormael even know what he has filmed? He obviously does. It is not all random as it seems, that is certain. But is there a single thread that connects the dots neatly and gives us a comprehensible structure? Or is Van Dormael only interested in playing tricks? For as you dig deeper, you find out there is not just one thread that connects the dots! There are still more! Just like the branched structure of the narrative itself!

[img]https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-pQGwIMnWua0/T1oEOCFebDI/AAAAAAAACNo/UbYzcBhIHhE/s656/vlcsnap-2012-03-05-21h45m39s15.jpg[/img]

The complex theme is only complemented by Jaco Van Dormael's penchant for quality filmmaking. His varying use of colour as it reflects the mood in each of the narratives of the "lives" of Nemo is especially commendable. And so is the beautiful music score, the choice and placement of songs in the key scenes in the narrative which give the film its distinct mood. The bizarre, dream-like imagery with the accompanying sound design is a treat for lovers of surrealism and there is a lot for film buffs who are suckers for teenage romance too! There is very little room for character development, thanks to a narrative that keeps shifting between timelines and universes and characters, but that is no reason to complain. The ensemble cast, including Jared Leto, Toby Regbo, Diane Kruger, Juno Temple, Sarah Polley, Daniel Mays, Rhys Ifans and Natasha Little all do their jobs well, especially Leto who has a mighty challenging task of playing several roles (well...almost!). He goes all out, yet slightly hams as the old, decrepit Nemo in some scenes. One really wishes there was more of Sarah Polley and Diane Kruger. Sadly, both get very little screen time, although Polley nails it with her 'Borderline personality disorder' performance. Juno Temple and Toby Regbo as the teenaged Anna and Nemo respectively make their doomed lovers angle of the story more watchable.

[img]https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-YnFl50UlsKI/T1oEMWBAB4I/AAAAAAAACNU/dJYkgPKskXk/s656/Mr.%2520Nobody.avi_snapshot_01.52.38_%255B2012.03.06_20.01.59%255D.jpg[/img]

CONCLUSION:

"Mr. Nobody" is a film that will not go down well with most people. It is a kind of film that is at a very big risk of being written off as "pretentious" and "self-indulgent"! Others may care less just because it is a little too heavy on the head! But it is also a film that is intellectually stimulating. It makes for some great food for thought and analyzing the story and then re-watching it makes it a more exciting experience. Additionally, it is a mind-expanding film that will make you aware of so many things around you if you are averse to reading about such material otherwise. It will make you rethink the ideas of space, time and reality as you know it!

My advice? Take up the challenge. Watch "Mr. Nobody"!

Score: 9/10.

[img]https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-Sfs3Rd-j7vU/T1oEN3EbV5I/AAAAAAAACNg/IguiPwa5r0g/s656/Mr.%2520Nobody.avi_snapshot_01.47.06_%255B2012.03.06_19.55.06%255D.jpg[/img]
March 9, 2012
Aditya Gokhale
Aditya Gokhale

Super Reviewer

In the late 21st century the last man who will die of old age thinks back on his life and the different paths it could have taken in this mix of arthouse drama, romance and science fiction. The film's problem soon becomes apparent: the audience remains as uncertain and confused about the real events in Nemo's life as the old man himself. He meets the girl, he loses the girl, the girl dies, he marries the girl. Possibilities blend into each other, we get different versions of the decisions he made and ends up marrying three different women. But which one is the real life he lead? Thankfully, the old man's interviewer is soon as confused as we are. Because while all that may sound pretty interesting, and it is for a while, things soon get repetitive and more confusing than necessary. It feels a bit as if the film wants to screw with our minds just for screwing's sake. By the end you don't even really expect a solution that makes sense anymore, and of course you only get a half-assed one. That's not to say that there are rewarding aspects to this film. Leto's acting is great and the futuristic set-ups and cinematography are outstanding. The problem is that the film's many layers keep you from connecting with the characters because you have no chance of knowing which parts are true or not anyway. A brave attempt, that would have worked so much better had it been a little more straight forward.
February 7, 2012
ironclad1609

Super Reviewer

Long, confusing and boring.
May 20, 2011
3niR
Dead Angel

Super Reviewer

    1. Nemo: The child could not make a choice because he did not know what would happen, but now that he knows what will happen, he can not make a choice.
    – Submitted by Aaron M (9 months ago)
    1. Nemo: In chess, it's called Zugzwang, when the only viable move is not to move.
    – Submitted by Jeremiah M (9 months ago)
    1. Nemo: A long as you don't choose, everything remains possible.
    – Submitted by Gabriela M (10 months ago)
    1. Nemo: They also call me Mr. CRAFT. You know, Can't Remember A Fucking Thing.
    – Submitted by Leonardo W (11 months ago)
    1. Nemo: Together we can do it.
    2. Elise: If I stay here, you're all gonna end up drowning with me.
    3. Nemo: We'll learn to swim. I love you.
    4. Elise: I love you.
    – Submitted by Adrianna A (12 months ago)
    1. Nemo: Without you, there is no life.
    – Submitted by Cameron H (13 months ago)
View all quotes (11)

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