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Domino (2005)
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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writers (WGA):
Release Date:
14 October 2005 (USA)
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Tagline:
I Am a Bounty Hunter more
Plot:
A recounting of Domino Harvey's life story. The daughter of actor Laurence Harvey turned away from her career as a Ford model to become a bounty hunter. full summary | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
Bounty Hunter
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FBI
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Mafia
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Model
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Split Screen
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Awards:
1 win
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NewsDesk:
(42 articles)
The Box review (3/5) - The premise turns out to be amazingly simple.
(From Movie Jungle. 5 November 2009, 9:59 PM, PST)
Tony Scott Directing Movie About Chippendales (the Male Dancers, Not Rescue Rangers)
(From Moviefone. 29 October 2009, 12:30 PM, PDT)
(From Movie Jungle. 5 November 2009, 9:59 PM, PST)
Tony Scott Directing Movie About Chippendales (the Male Dancers, Not Rescue Rangers)
(From Moviefone. 29 October 2009, 12:30 PM, PDT)
User Comments:
Tony Scott's Postmodern Masterpiece
more (349 total)
Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Keira Knightley | ... | Domino Harvey | |
| Mickey Rourke | ... | Ed Moseby | |
| Édgar Ramírez | ... | Choco (as Edgar Ramirez) | |
| Delroy Lindo | ... | Claremont Williams | |
| Mo'Nique | ... | Lateesha Rodriguez | |
| Mena Suvari | ... | Kimmie | |
| Macy Gray | ... | Lashandra Davis | |
| Jacqueline Bisset | ... | Sophie Wynn | |
| Dabney Coleman | ... | Drake Bishop | |
| Brian Austin Green | ... | Himself | |
| Ian Ziering | ... | Himself | |
| Stanley Kamel | ... | Anthony Cigliutti | |
| Peter Jacobson | ... | Burke Beckett | |
| T.K. Carter | ... | Lester Kincaid | |
| Kel O'Neill | ... | Frances |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Domino (France)
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MPAA:
Rated R for strong violence, pervasive language, sexual content/nudity and drug use.
Parents Guide:
Runtime:
127 min
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Ireland:16 |
UK:15 |
Singapore:M18 (cut) |
Singapore:M18 |
Japan:R-15 |
Australia:MA |
Netherlands:16 |
Finland:K-15 |
Indonesia:Dewasa |
Brazil:18 |
Czech Republic:15 |
Philippines:R-13 |
Sweden:15 |
Germany:16 |
Iceland:16 |
France:-12 |
USA:R (NO. 41704) |
Norway:15 |
Denmark:15 |
South Africa:16 |
Malaysia:18PL |
Canada:13+ (Quebec) |
Canada:14A (Ontario) (Canadian Home Video rating) |
Canada:18A (Alberta/British Columbia/Manitoba) |
Argentina:16 |
Hungary:16 |
Italy:T |
Ireland:18 (DVD rating) |
New Zealand:R16
Filming Locations:
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
The word "fuck" and all of its derivatives are said 123 times in the movie.
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Goofs:
Incorrectly regarded as goofs: When Choco and Ed are arguing in the hotel room, Choco cocks his revolver twice without uncocking in-between, but this is more likely to be a repetition of the first cocking, which is frequently done throughout the film, repeating lines and actions after they have occurred.
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Quotes:
Domino Harvey:
[voiceover] Nobody really knows where Ed came from. This much is clear - the man's been places, seen things, lived life. He did a term in Soledad and a term in Angola where he lost a toe during a prison riot. The man's a warroir.
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Movie Connections:
Features "The Jerry Springer Show" (1991)
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Soundtrack:
Supa Powa
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FAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (349 total)
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" Domino " has been widely condemned on this site for its frenetic editing style and " sickening " photography. It's detractors cite its superficiality and criticize its deployment of " style over substance" I couldn't disagree more. I believe that " Domino " represents the absolute height of Tony Scott's film-making career.
After having created the dominant Hollywood action movie style throughout the late eighties and early nineties Tony Scott has moved progressively closer to a more subjective style of cinema. As early as "Crimson Tide" Scott used his stylistic talent to portray the inner worlds of his characters- the claustrophobia and drama inherent in the conflict on board a nuclear submarine was embodied in the excellent use of long lenses combined with dutched-angle framing. This was then carried through to " Enemy Of The State" and "Spy Game" which visually represented the worlds of surveillance and espionage respectively.
" Man On Fire" was an extreme departure , a move into an expressionist more painterly aesthetic. Here Scott used an antiquated hand cranked camera and flash frames to express his character's explosive rage . Although not entirely successful it introduced the techniques which were to find their full expression in " Domino"
Couched in the framing device of an FBI interrogation " Domino" presents the life of the infamous bounty hunter via her narrated disjointed fragments of memory. She grasps at memories as we all do- in fragments, flashes and brief snatches. As Domino relays her story verbally Scott relays it visually illustrating not only the events which she describes but also the point of view which guides them. She does have " traces of mescaline" in her system but her individual vision is anyway Unusual -that of an woman who eschewed the life of luxury for bounty hunting.
It is when Domino begins to relate the events which lead to her captivity that Scott really lets rip. Together with Cinematographer Dan Mindel and composer Harry-Gregson Williams Scott orchestrates a postmodern canvas of contemporary Americana. Gradually we begin to realize that unusual though she may be Domino is no more disjointed than the "90210" culture she has rejected. As she wades through this cultural melange Scott makes his viewer more aware of the innocence which it destroys through the underprivileged children which the narrative introduces. Ultimately Scott portrays their salvation as the only escape we have from this surreal trip.
To criticize this movie for being overly stylized is akin to criticizing a Picasso or a Pollock for not representing that which is recognizably human. Like any great painting the meaning in " Domino" is in the surface and the surface is everything.
I am not in any way associated with Scott Free but have always been and will continue to be a huge admirer of Tony Scott's work