Adaptation with Nicolas Cage: DVD Cover
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Adaptation
a.k.a. Adaptation. Director: Spike Jonze Cast: Nicolas Cage, Meryl Streep, Chris Cooper, Brian Cox

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  • DVD Release Date: 05/20/2003
  • Original Release: 2002
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 14,002

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  • Overview
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Scenes

Features

This single, high-resolution Superbit™ DVD includes no extras. The space on the disc typically used for special features is devoted instead to optimizing the quality of the movie's image and sound. Other technical specifications: anamorphic video; widescreen presentation; English 5.1 Dolby Digital; English DTS; English and French subtitles.

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Scene Index

Side #1 --
1. Opening Monologue [2:01]
2. Charlie Kaufman, Screenwriter [2:04]
3. Valerie [2:04]
4. John Laroche [3:45]
5. Donald, Charlie's Twin Brother [2:18]
6. Amelia Kavan [7:03]
7. Delusions of Grandeur [3:44]
8. Spot Your Flower [1:44]
9. Orlean's Dinner Party [2:38]
10. Fuck Fish [2:01]
11. Alice, the Waitress [4:36]
12. The Santa Barbara Orchid Show [8:12]
13. Darkness Descends [6:06]
14. Marty the Super Agent [4:09]
15. Susan's Advice [3:38]
16. The 3 [2:15]
17. Lost in the Fakahatchee [1:30]
18. Robert McKee's Story Seminar [6:21]
19. Drinks With Bob [3:59]
20. The Great Donald's Advice [3:14]
21. Impersonating Charlie [2:09]
22. Spying on Susan [1:55]
23. I'm Very Happy Now [4:39]
24. Secrets Revealed [5:06]
25. Return to the Swamp [5:46]
26. Are They Gone? [5:27]
27. Deus ex Machina [3:24]
28. Happy Together [4:33]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Going through the looking glass and into the kaleidoscope, Adaptation defies easy description. A movie within a movie about the creation of a movie, it is an exhilarating mix of reality, fantasy, and dark humor, filled with satire and sharp performances. The concept revolves around screenwriter Charlie Kaufman (Nicolas Cage), who battles writer’s block while trying to adapt the book The Orchid Thief by New Yorker scribe Susan Orlean (Meryl Streep). The story mirrors that of the real-life Charlie Kaufman, who struggled mightily to adapt Orlean's novel about John Laroche (played by Chris Cooper), who poaches rare orchids in Florida's Everglades. Kaufman (the character) has an identical twin brother, Donald (also played by Cage), a freeloading lunk who inflates Charlie’s frustrations, fears, and delusions by taking a quickie screenwriting course with guru Robert McKee (Brian Cox) and selling a serial-killer flick for a cool million at the height of Charlie’s despair. Playing with the boundaries of fact and fiction, the film intersperses bits of The Orchid Thief adaptation with Charlie's other struggles -- namely, women and the world of moviemaking. The result blurs everyone’s perceptions of what’s real, what’s make-believe, and…what’s the difference, anyway? Few movies have been this provocative and playful since 1999’s Being John Malkovich, which Kaufman wrote and brought to the screen with Adaptation director Spike Jonze. Fans of that gem will exult as Malkovich, Jonze, and Malkovich stars John Cusack and Catherine Keener show up for cleverly interwoven cameos. Adaptation's three lead performers, each Academy Award nominated, make this tricky material work brilliantly: Streep exercises her penchant for humor; Cage recaptures the offbeat appeal he mastered in such films as Raising Arizona; and Cooper's turn is simply revelatory, earning him the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. A bold and sly homage to the pains of the creative process, Adaptation proves that the real Kaufman is among the screen's most creative processors. Peter Marchand, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

I liked the Movie, but in my opinion the acting of Nichalas Cage was a distrationby searchmc

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October 10, 2008: I liked the Movie, but in my opinion the acting of Nicolas Cage was a distration. The twins felt like they were the same person. I almost couldn't tell when one started and the other ended. Still I like the story.

Oh Daaaahling: how precious!by Anonymous

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June 03, 2006: It's easy to dismiss this movie as a whiny attempt to promote the screenwriter's art as a "REAL" art, wrapped up in a pretentious, self-referential coating that will be lauded by people who use the suffix "meta-" and words like "recursive"... so that's what I'm going to do.


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