Insomnia with Al Pacino: DVD Cover
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Insomnia Director: Christopher Nolan Cast: Al Pacino, Robin Williams, Hilary Swank, Maura Tierney

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  • DVD Release Date: 10/15/2002
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 21,187

Viewer Rating: (6 ratings)

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  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
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Scenes

Features

Closed Caption; Additional scene; Commentary: director Chris Nolan (commentary in order of shooting sequence); Commentary: Hilary Swank, production designer Nathan Crowley, editor Dody Dorn, cinematographer Wally Pfister, and screenwriter Hillary Seitz ; Featurette: Day for Night (making-of documentary); Featurette - 180º: A Conversation With Christopher Nolan and Al Pacino; Featurette: In the Fog (cinematography and production design); Featurette: Eyes Wide Open (the insomniac's world); Stills gallery; Interactive menus; Theatrical trailer; Cast/crew film highlights; Scene access; Languages: English & Français (dubbed in Quebec); Subtitles: English, Français & Español; Enhanced features for your DVD-ROM PC

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Scene Index

Side #1 --
1. Credits
2. Welcome to Nightmule
3. Crossing the Line
4. An Admirer
5. House of Cards
6. Randy's Act
7. Kay's Things
8. Chasing the Suspect
9. Man Down
10. Calling Trish
11. Sleepless
12. Crime Scene
13. Bullet for Bullet
14. No Rest
15. "I Saw You Shoot Your Partner."
16. Her Best Friend
17. On Finch's Trail
18. Across the Logjam
19. Hiding Place
20. Ferry Meeting
21. Wild Card
22. Shared Secret
23. Questioning Finch
24. Just in Time
25. Tainted Forever
26. Feeling the Truth
27. Justifies the Means
28. To the Beach House
29. I Don't Know Anymore
30. Don't Lose Your Way
31. End Credits

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

One of the most riveting psychological thrillers of recent years, the intricately written, tautly directed Insomnia is further enhanced by superb performances from two enormously gifted actors. Al Pacino shines as a famous Los Angeles police detective working a murder case in Alaska while trying to ride out an internal-affairs investigation back home. Robin Williams portrays the murderer, a clever detective-story writer who reveals his identity to Pacino early on and engages the detective in a potentially deadly cat-and-mouse game. In this American-made adaptation of a well-received 1997 Norwegian film (which starred Stellan Skarsgard as the cop), director Christopher Nolan retains the original’s primary gimmick: Suddenly transported to the land of the midnight sun, the detective is unable to adjust, and his mental acuity is blunted by sleep deprivation. Both Pacino and Williams are uncharacteristically understated, and they receive top-notch support from Hilary Swank (as an eager-beaver Alaskan cop who admires the L.A. detective), Maura Tierney, Nicky Katt, Martin Donovan, and Paul Dooley. The multilayered plot unfolds without resorting to phony melodrama or cheap shocks, which automatically gives Nolan’s movie an edge on the competition. In a genre too often dominated by lazy scripting, two-dimensional characters, and formulaic direction, Insomnia gets extremely high marks. In addition to supplying his own feature-length commentary for the DVD, Nolan conducts an on-camera interview with Pacino and provides commentary for deleted and extended scenes. Swank does her own commentary, and there are two making-of featurettes along with a gallery of stills, production sketches, and posters. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

Guilt, Sleep, and Ethical Responsibility, Insomnia is a Great Filmby Medvegas

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September 03, 2009: This film, as vanguard and insightful as it is suspenseful, engenders a deep appreciation for the guilt, remorse, and conscience of a good cop beleaguered by a past that, to put it mildly, blurs the fine blue line between a detective on the endless pursuit to capture a murderer, and the willingness to go to extraordinary lengths to effect that end result, including planting evidence on a suspect. Will Dormer (Al Pacino) is sent to an obscure Alaskan outpost that is the very essence of "the land of the midnight sun," wherein the sun shines for the duration of summer, followed by months of incessant darkness in winter. Dormer along with his longtime detective partner, are sent here to not only help with the investigation of a murder of an adolescent girl, but also to escape an Internal Affairs investigation inside the Los Angeles Police Department concerning Dormer's unorthodox and illicit praxis of planting evidence.

As the film progresses, Dormer is becoming increasingly disturbed, as much by the death of his partner at his own hands, as the lack of sleep subsequent to it. What can only be described as a proverbial cat-and-mouse game ensues between Dormer and a man (Robin Williams), who happens to have witnessed the former taking the life of his partner by mistake, and the latter then tries to use this knowledge to his advantage. Aided by the very impetuous Ellie Burr (Hillary Swank), a rookie out of the academy who had actually studied one of Dormer's investigations (The Leeland Street Murders), Dormer is charged with informing Burr of the nuances of police investigation, while simultaneously trying to find the killer of Kay Connell, the adolescent girl that was murdered which he was sent to investigate. What follows is a unique insight into what can happen when a good cop turns rogue, with a complete absence of sleep, and what might transpire between a man looking for redemption, a man looking for someone to understand and listen to him, and the realization that occurs that the end does not by necessity justify the means, but rather it is the willingness to play by the rules of law, and to that end, to do the right thing in the face of ethics.

By virtue of studying human behavior in all of its contexts for over a decade in college, I can attest to the accuracy of the emotional underpinnings of guilt and remorse, as evidenced by Dormer's emotional turmoil, and the human propensity to concomitantly grapple with such feelings while dealing with a depraved extortioner, hunting for that very killer, investigating suspects, solving the case so that he can go back to LA to face his past, get very much needed shut-eye, all the while staying in a tiny town on the fringes of existence, with what seems like an eternal sun, dealing with the loss of his partner at his own hands, and ultimately convincing the ethical Burr to "not loose your way." Insomnia goes well beyond the almost perfunctory nature of many "mystery-suspense-psychological thrillers" that audiences flock to in order to make sense of an insensible world, without the need for a PSY degree, and this film conveys this somewhat imperceptible facet of human existence; guilt, remorse, and ethical responsibility inherent in the human condition and to police officers who must deal with this on a daily basis.

Michael Wade

Great Suspense Thrillerby Anonymous

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February 16, 2006: A classic "good vs evil" story-line that explores "does the ends justify the means" concept. Pacino is a good cop with good intentions but he is playing judge, jury and executioner.


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