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A History of Violence

United States

2005

96 Min
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
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DIR David Cronenberg

PROD Chris Bender, J.C. Spink

SCR John Wagner, Vince Locke, Josh Olson

DP Peter Suschitzky

CAST Viggo Mortensen, Ed Harris, William Hurt, Maria Bello

ED Ronald Sanders

Synopsis

David Cronenberg directed this screen adaptation of a graphic novel by John Wagner and Vince Locke which explores how an act of heroism unexpectedly changes a man’s life. Tom Stall (Viggo Mortensen) lives a quiet life in a small Indiana town, running the local diner with his wife, Edie (Maria Bello), and raising their two children. But the quiet is shattered one day when a pair of criminals on the run from the police walk into his diner just before closing time. After they attack one of the customers and seem ready to kill several of the people inside, Tom jumps to the fore, grabbing a gun from one of the criminals and killing the invaders. Tom is immediately hailed as a hero by his employees and the community at large, but Tom seems less than comfortable with his new notoriety. One day, a man with severe facial scars, Carl Fogarty (Ed Harris), sits down at the counter and begins addressing Tom as Joey, and begins asking him questions about the old days in Philadelphia. While Tom seems puzzled, Carl’s actions suggest that the quiet man pouring coffee at the diner may have a dark and violent past he isn’t eager to share with others — as well as some old scores that haven’t been settled.

(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:308382)

Director

David_cronenberg

David Cronenberg

Like Tobe Hooper and George Romero, David Cronenberg sprang into public consciousness with a series of low-budget horror films that shocked and surprised audiences for their sheer audacity and intelligence. Unlike the former two filmmakers, Cronenberg has been able to avoid being pigeonholed into a single restrictive genre category. His works, which consistently explore the same themes, have the mark of a true auteur in the strictest sense of the word. Cronenberg’s films have the unnerving ability to delve into society’s collective unconscious and dredge up all of the perverse, suppressed desires of modern life. His world features grotesque deformities, hallucinatory couplings, and carnality unhinged from its corporeal moorings. The body mutates and becomes something horrific as in Rabid (1977) or The Fly (1986), psyches fuse with technology as in Crash (1996) and Videodrome (1983), and the act of sex itself is rendered bizarre and alien in Naked Lunch (1991) and Dead Ringers (1988… read more

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Gregory Milla

30Jan10

I remember leaving the theatre asking myself if I had just watched a perfect movie... Brillant! PS:I would love to see Maria Bello more often...  

Omar

13Jan10

It isn't Videodrome or Naked Lunch (what is, or could be, either one of those?) It's very tense and does contain really great performances (Mortensen obviously), but I kind of violently disagree with the "not deep," etc. It's pretty deep, and the more I think about AHOV (since having seen it 4 yrs ago), it's probably the deepest work Cronenberg's done since at least Dead Ringers (and I love Naked Lunch)...  
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Vocalities

6Jan10

It's not Videodrome or Naked Lunch, but it's still a tense movie with some really great performances. Nah, it's not deep and you're not going to be having discussions about the movie for years to come, but it's worth watching and an interesting departure from typical Cronenberg.   

Cristiano Cunha

26Nov09

I love Spider and Eastern Promises but this movie is a waste of time!  

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The Diner Scene rules.

By Vocalit​ies on January 6, 2010

I am a fan of David Cronenberg. I think his movies are very thought-provoking, deep, unique, and honest. I respect his style, his views, his intellect, and look forward to anything he does. I missed…  read review

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By Bruce on September 1, 2009

I am repulsed by the simplicity smeared all over the screen in this one, and doubly repulsed by some of the banter being passed around insisting that this dreck is his most subtle and/or complex film…  read review

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By Sam Cooper on July 28, 2009

Who ever said that Cronenberg was going soft? This is the follow up to Spider, which I consider to be one of his greatest accomplishments of all time. History is just as good, but in different ways…  read review

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By nallan on April 20, 2009

Doesn’t do it for me in that great Cronenbergian / ‘new flesh’ way, but loved it nonetheless. This and ‘Eastern Promises’ are kind of defining a new type of Cronenberg aesthetic – and I like. In some…  read review

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