Hangover Movie: Reality Bites

Hangover Movie Reality Bites

Hangover Movie Review: Reality Bites- Movie of a Lost Generation

Reality Bites (1994) focuses on the lives of four recent college graduates who drink, smoke, and sleep around. It’s a movie about the life and love in the post-Baby Boom generation.

Reality Bites opens with a speech in which the college valedictorian Lelaina (Winona Ryder) expresses her general dissatisfaction with the world. Her last words to the friends, parents, and fellow graduates listening to her speech are “There is no answer.” That vague angst is the most consistent plot theme in the film.  Lelaina and her three buddies Vickie (Janeane Garofalo), Sammy (Steve Zahn), and Troy (Ethan Hawke) have worthless jobs; play drinking games, and look for love. Lelaina and Troy have feelings for each other, but they haven’t acted on them besides one drunken encounter. Lelaina meets Michael Grates (Ben Stiller-also director of the film) who is production executive at a MTV-like television channel. The two start dating, and a predictable love triangle ensues. A lot of the film features the characters opining about their love lives, slacker friends, and their annoying parents.

Reality Bites has been criticized for its cinematography and soundtrack. It’s filmed as a documentary-in-progress, which does a little to explain the strange camera angles and poor framing. The whiny pop-songs, however, are perhaps less excusable.

Reality Bites has long been hailed as the anthem of Generation X. Most movies that represent this generation feature bored 20-somethings with no direction, no real ambition, and no desire to start a career, home, or family.  The youth of this era would rather waste time philosophizing than do anything productive. Generation X was creative, cynical, overeducated, looking for love in all the wrong places and tired of being told they’re over privileged whiners who don’t know what real problems are. Generation X witnessed the rise of the yuppies and the burst of the dot-com bubbles. Situated in between the Baby Boomers and the Millennials, Generation X is largely ignored these days. During the 90’s, though, Generation X had a brief moment in the spotlight. Dozens of movies like Reality Bites were released, showcasing the underemployed, overeducated, and hopeless Gen X-ers. This is the generation that refused to grow up. The ones who swore they would not end up like their parents. This is the first generation to say to their parents “We don’t want what you have.”

By all accounts, they didn’t get it. This is the first generation to make less than their parents did, reversing a historic trend. Between the Baby Boomers making headlines for every new stage of life they enter and the millenials Facebook-ing, Tweeting, and YouTube-ing everything they do, Gen X toils away in relative ignominy. New studies suggest, however, that this generation is relatively happy, family-oriented, and balanced, dispelling the stereotype of the materialistic, disenfranchised, and lazy youth born in the early 60’s to the early 80’s. So perhaps, there is an answer and maybe even some hope for the Gen-Xers after all.

If you need help with your addiction give us a call now at 1-800-984-4003.

Hangover Movie: Leaving Las Vegas

Hangover Movie: Leaving Las Vegas

Leaving Las Vegas (1995) is a gritty drama starring Nicholas Cage and Elizabeth Shue. Failed Hollywood screenwriter, Ben (played by Cage) moves to Vegas intending to drink himself to death. He’s lost everything to his drinking. Ben meets hardened prostitute Sera (played by Shue) after almost hitting her while driving drunkenly down the Vegas Strip. They form an uneasy friendship, and she takes him in and cares for him. Leaving Las Vegas was based on a semi-autobiographical novel by author John O’Brian.

Two weeks after production started, O’Brian committed suicide-another sad illustration of the hopelessness of alcoholism. This movie is a must-see if you haven’t already seen it. The acting is outstanding. Cage delivers a performance that is both heart-breaking and authentic, winning both an Academy Award and a Golden Globe for his part.

If you need help with your addiction give us a call now at 1-800-984-4003.

Hangover Movie: Clean and Sober

Clean and Sober

Clean and Sober

Hangover Movie: Clean and Sober

Made in 1988 with a cast starring Michael Keaton, Kathy Baker and Morgan Freeman; Clean and Sober is your classic hangover movie with a bit of a twist. Unlike today’s hangover movies, Clean and Sober is about doing the harder stuff such as cocaine.

Michael Keaton plays a drunken cocaine addict, Daryl Poynter who just happens to be a successful real estate agent too. In this hangover movie Michael Keaton or Daryl Poynter wakes up from one of the more serious hangovers we have ever seen on film. When Daryl Poynter wakes up from his night of cocaine use and drinking he finds a woman dead in his bed from a coke overdose and that’s not all. Daryl Poynter also gets a call from his employers at the real estate agency who are telling him that huge sum of money is missing from one of his accounts. The details of the story are the woman was a young girl whose father is now looking for, putting up missing signs all over the city and accusing Michael Keaton’s character of being a murderer and the amount of money missing is an embezzled 100,000 dollars that Daryl Poynter used in the stock market and lost.

Needless to say, this hangover turns into a nightmare for Michael Keaton’s character. In order to avoid the law Daryl Poynter checks himself into a drug rehab to hide. He doesn’t really want to be there nor does he really want to be sober he just needs a place to escape the horrible consequences he woke up to.

And of course, enter, Morgan Freeman. Morgan Freeman plays the tough drug counselor at the drug rehab that Michael Keaton’s character has now checked himself into. Morgan Freeman’s character happens to be a recovering addict himself and knows all the tricks in the addict book that Michael Keaton’s character tries to pull throughout the movie. After working with Craig aka Morgan Freeman, Daryl Poynter starts to realize he may have accidentally ended up in the right place for someone like him and begins to find himself changing into someone who wants to be sober. Not only that but Daryl Poynter finds himself in a romance with an abused fellow addict, played by Kathy Baker which is classic of any kind of real drug and alcohol rehab. Not only has that but, Michael Keaton’s character found himself with a sponsor in AA who is more than understanding of his plight in actor M. Emmet Walsh.

The hangover movie: Clean and Sober is an intense, gritty drama about substance abuse that portrays realistically the horror, shame, fear and even hope and recovery that comes with having and recovering from an addiction. It also shows the irony of trying to run from your problems and then running into your solution. Clean and Sober does a good job of showing how an addict hits their bottom and finds help in treatment and then begins the journey into sobriety. This movie was acclaimed as one of the best cinematic treatments of substance abuse meaning they did a great job of portraying it in a realistic light.

If you need help with your addiction give us a call now at 1-800-984-4003.

Hangover Movie: Get Him to the Greek

Hangover Movie: Get Him to the Greek

This is one of my favorite movies of all time. Russell Brand plays Aldous Snow (his character from Forgetting Sarah Marshall) a British rock star that has struggled with addiction. In the opening scenes, Aldous Snow goes from the recovered drug addict we knew in Forgetting Sarah Marshall, relapses on drugs and alcohol, and his fame takes a nose dive.

Jonah Hill plays Aaron Green, a talent scout working at an LA record company who is a big fan of Aldous Snow and his band, Infant Sorrow. He pitches the idea of an anniversary concert, the record company agrees, and he’s off to bring Aldous Snow from London to the Greek Theatre in LA. Sounds simple, right? Not when you’re dealing with a drug addict who only cares about the next high. Hilarity ensues as Aldous and Aaron get themselves into a number of ridiculous situations-Aldous looking for the next party, and Aaron trying to keep them on schedule.

I expected this movie to be funny, and it was, but it also had a legitimate emotional side that I didn’t expect. Russell Brand, a recovering drug addict himself, gives one of the most accurate portrayals of the debauchery and heartache of addiction I have ever seen.  A definite must see.

If you need help with your addiction give us a call now at 1-800-984-4003.

Hangover Movie – Requiem for a Dream

Yesterday I watched Requiem for a Dream for the first time and was it INTENSE! I don’t think I’ve ever been sucked into a movie the way I was when I watched this film. I felt the pain, aguish, fear, depression, pressure and anxiety that all the characters were going through. It was real, too real. This is a film I recommend that everyone (18 and over unless your parents approve otherwise) watch because it gives a more realistic portrayal of the cycle of addiction and how synical it really is. Yes, it’s a bit dramatic (as most main stream films are) but very gritty.

WARNING: Requiem for a Dream is NSFW: In case you’re wondering what NSFW means; it means it’s NOT SUITABLE FOR WORK.

This is a classic movie about addiction, societal pressure, the quest for freedom from addiction in general – not just from a substance. All the characters had in some way, good intentions, but in the end suffered very serious consequences from their drug addictions. In this movie you’ll see characters that are battling Heroin, Cocaine and Speed addictions. The movie is split into three seasons – Summer, Fall and Winter. In the Summer we find the characters blooming and experiencing happiness and highs in their life. In the Fall they hit a hard wall and begin to fall apart and once Winter comes around all hell has broken loose and their lives have become unmanageable, dark and destructive. The director, Darren Aronofsky was not interested in Requiem For a Dream as a junky movie or a film about drug paraphernalia. He was more interested in the before and after of drug use.

Requiem for a Dream Trailer

If you need help with your addiction give us a call now at 1-800-984-4003.