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Directed by Olivier Assayas.
A woman throws herself into a last-ditch struggle to conquer her demons in this gritty drama from director Olivier Assayas. Lee Hauser (James Johnston) is a faded rock star who lives with his wife, Emily Wang (Maggie Cheung), the former host of a European music video show, in a small town in Western Canada. Both Lee and Emily have been battling drug addiction for years, and when Lee finally dies of an OD, Emily finds herself charged with possession of heroin and ends up spending six months in jail. Lee and Emily's son, Jay (James Dennis), has been living with his paternal grandparents, Albrecht (Nick Nolte) and Rosemary (Martha Henry), and while Emily is eager to see her son after getting out of jail, Albrecht persuades her that she needs to get herself clean before she can reconnect with Jay. Determined to get off methadone, Emily relocates to France, where she scares up a job as a waitress and moves in with her old friend Elena (Béatrice Dalle). Emily's attempts to start a new career and stay off drugs prove to be an uphill battle, and she doesn't appear to be winning her fight when she learns that Albrecht and Jay will be accompanying Rosemary to London for medical treatment when Rosemary contracts a serious illness -- and that Albrecht is considering making a side trip to Paris. Clean was screened in competition at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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leeroy711leeroy711 Clean review
by leeroy711 in leeroy711 Blog
is neutral about it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"Clean (2004) *** stars out of 5 Directed by: Olivier Assayas Starring: Maggie Cheung, Nick Nolte, Martha Henry and James Dennis Running Time: 111 minutes Rated: R Synopsis: Clean begins with the heroin overdose and subsequent death of a formerly successful rock star. This leaves his girlfriend, Emily Wang (Cheung) to serve a six month sentence alone and without the drugs she is so desperately addicted to. She is also left with a deep desire to reconnect with the son, Jay (Dennis) she has yet to build a relationship with. The child has been raised by her deceased boyfriend’s parents, Albrecht and Rosemary (Nolte and Henry) and they are more than apprehensive about letting his addict of a mother slip in and out of his young fragile life. If she is to have any chance of a meaningful relationship with her son, she must change her life. She must get clean. Review: I found myself very reluctant to give this film a bad review. There really ... " [More]
tadivtadiv Clean: A Moving film about one’ ...
by tadiv in tadiv Blog
loved it.
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"Palm Pictures presents an Olivier Assayas film titled Clean. Clean stars Maggie Cheung in her Cannes Film Festival Best Actress award winning role as Emily, the junkie wife of a rock star. This picture also stars Nick Nolte, Béatrice Dalle, Jeanne Balibar, Martha Henry, James Johnston, Rémi Martin, and introduces James Dennis. Clean is MPAA rated R for drug content, language and brief nudity. This film runs 111 minutes. The wife of a has-been rock star struggles with the heroin addiction she and her husband shared. After tragedy strikes, she fights to regain her footing in life so that she can, maybe, reenter the life of her son who has lived with his father’s parents since the tragedy. Cinematographer Eric Gautier expertly films this picture, winning the Technical Grand Prize in Cannes, 2004. The editing is very clean and, of course, the performances are very good – as mentioned above, Maggie Cheung won the Best Actress award in Cannes. Nic ... " [More]
belladonna2054belladonna2054 A Long Road to Become Clean
by belladonna2054 in belladonna2054 Blog
loved it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"Clean (2004) is a movie by Olivier Assayas, director of as Paris, je t’aime (2006), takes us on a journey into the hard world of the music business and drugs. Clean stars Maggie Cheung in her award winning role as Emily Wang, girlfriend and heroin addict of a struggling rocker and fellow junkie, Lee Hauser (played by James Johnson). After breaking off a potential gig in Canada, both travel back to their hotel. They both argue about how she is blamed for Lee’s continuing failures and she ends up leaving for the night and gets high in an empty parking lot. The next morning when Emily returns, the police are in the room where Lee was found dead of a drug overdose. The police arrest her when she attempts to get into the room and discover a couple of bags of heroin in her purse. Emily is sentenced to six months in prison and when she is released, she is briefly reunited with Lee’s father Albrecht (played by Nick Nolte). Albrecht also takes care of Emily and Lee& ... " [More]
BigJeffLebowskiBigJeffLebowski Recovery Chic
by BigJeffLebowski in BigJeffLebowski Blog
liked it.
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"It would seem that society is increasingly embracing the present and the past. For all of the market testing, advance polling, and research analysis which has reduced so many of our figureheads to puppets caught in the winds of popular opinion, there is a growing lack of restraint and forethought in the actions of many of our celebrities. Chalk it up to the information age if you'd like, to the ubiquitous surveilance we are under from the totalitarian slanted government, the predatory press, and every schmuck with a camera phone; perhaps we have no choice but to wash and dry our dirty laundry in the public eye. Still, the sea change in how information is delivered seems to have resulted in decisions made for the short term becoming far more prevelant than they ever were before. We needn't look any farther than Lindsay Lohan's latest attempt at respectability after several stints in rehab: posing as Marilyn Monroe in New York magazine. It's mind-bogglingly embar ... " [More]
slipofthetongueslipofthetongue Sometimes Clean Can Be Sterile
by slipofthetongue in SlipOfTheTongue Blog
lost interest.
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"If the meaning in Olivier Assayas' CLEAN is to be found by reading in between the lines, by listening hard during breathy pauses, or by paying extra close attention as characters vacantly survey one another then fine...but this isn't my idea of a good time. CLEAN just is what it is, I suppose. It lays out its story with dispassionate realism, with an observational neutrality that is nether revealing nor involving. Obviously someone must have loved this film enough to make it, and to distribute it. I just don't understand why.I suppose I do get that Emily Wang (Maggie Cheung) is a burned out shell of a human being, and that the only thing pulling her back is the threat that she will no longer be allowed to see her son. Does this make her an interesting character? Her motives are selfish. That's ok I guess, that's realistic, fine. But one has to wonder if this character wants to get better for herself as well. Is there anything that lies beneath? Does sh ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Spout Mavens review - Clean
by Risselada in Risselada Blog
is neutral about it.
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"There is nothing particularly badly done about the movie Clean, but there is not much remarkable about it either.For a movie about drugs, bad relationships, motherhood, prison, the entertainment industry, big city hopping, and a lot more, there is surprisingly few high or low points of drama. Everything kind of just trudges along. Which might be fine if there was also some humor. But this movie is not only lacking in drama, it's completely lacking in humor. There's not a lick of it. And there's certainly no action. What else is there? Art? Not really.I was thinking maybe it was hard for me to respond to this movie because it focuses on a culture that I generally have an aversion to and little interest in. People who are looking for fame and reputation. People who want to be cool but are still interested in fame and money. How do I describe it? You know people who have no real personality, but a big ego, and listen to crappy music?But I don't think I have ... " [More]
JScottJScott Clean
by JScott in JScott Blog
is neutral about it.
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"Maggie Cheung, best known for her roles in multiple Wong Kar Wai films, stars as Emily Wang a drug addict in her ex-husband, Olivier Assayas' film Clean. Emily is the mother of burnt out rocker Lee Hauser's (James Johnston) child Jay and bad influence on Lee's life. All of his aquaintences tell him to drop her and focus on getting his music and his life back together. He overdoses and she is put in the middle of the investigation. She denies supplying him with the lethal drugs and pleads guilty to possession. After serving 6 months in jail she tries to get clean and get her child back, who is being looked after by Lee's parents Abbie and Albrecht (Nick Nolte) that have custody of Jay.The film is very much about the title, getting clean, and strong hold drugs can have on people even if they very much want to get off of it. Ultimately it is Emily's desire to reconnect with her son, who doesn't want to be apart of her life, that makes her "come clean ... " [More]
marincatmarincat Clean
by marincat in marincat Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"When I read the cover of Clean, directed by Olivier Assayas , my first thought was that it would be just another drug addiction story with a little boy lost. Much to my surprise, it was a very good film with some intensely acted parts that were well worth watching.Maggie Cheung, an apparent knockoff of Yoko Ono in looks, plays the role of Emily Wang. To say that she is not well liked would be diminishing the impact she has on people she is in contact with on a daily basis. She is nasty, self-absorbed, foul mouthed and sullen. Her partner, Lee Hauser, played briefly by James Johnston, is also a slave to his heroin addiction. His time on screen is short because the film really isn’t about him at all. The act of overdosing and subsequently dying is actually the catalyst for the remainder of the film.Emily and Lee have a son, Jay, played by James Dennis. He lives with his grandparents, Rosemary and Albrecht Hauser. Martha Henry is Rosemary, kind, gentle, and yet with an u ... " [More]
vhsparrowvhsparrow 'Celebrity' is the real drug...
by vhsparrow in vhsparrow Blog
liked it.
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"What happened to Linda Emery after the death of Bruce Lee? To Courtney Love after the death of Kurt Cobain? To Yoko, after John Lennon was shot by Mark David Chapman? Olivier Assayas' 'Clean' is a sobering look at one of these morning-afters. Maggie Cheung stars as Emily Wang, a Yoko-like ex-MTV celebrity trying to assist her husband/veteran rock-star stage his comeback on the eve of his accidental drug-overdose. Since she was also a drug-user, it is inevitable that the rock star's parents blame her for his death; Emily's son, Jay remains in his grandparents' care, so it is also inevitable that the boy's terminally ill grandmother is also reluctant to grant Emily any visitation rights. Like the 2 other films ('The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things' and 'You're Gonna Miss Me') I got from the Spout Mavens group the week before, this seemed as though it was going to be a boner – some child trapped in circumstances created b ... " [More]
erico_77375erico_77375 Clean Is Not Entirely Sober, Bu ...
by erico_77375 in erico_77375 Blog
is neutral about it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"There’s a question that comes with watching any movie about self-destructive people, whether it be Gone With The Wind or Sherrybaby. The question is always the same: Why should I care? It’s compelling to see characters struggle with demons, to see how they get around in a world that can chew them up and spit them out. The problem is that many movies make the mistake of thinking that the audience cares about the destruction, to see characters spiral out of control for the sake of hitting rock-bottom. What we care about is the path of the character, coming to either an understanding or lack thereof by the time the movie comes to an end. Oliver Assayas’ Clean starring Maggie Cheung is a movie that’s very difficult to explain, since it’s main character is hell-bent for self-destruction if it isn’t for a need to become the mother to her six-year-old son. Cheung plays Emily Wang, the girlfriend of a faded rock star, and whom is mentioned by his friend ... " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
The humanistic, traditionally shot and edited drama Clean is a far cry from director Olivier Assayas' previous collaboration with actress Maggie Cheung, the off-the-wall deconstructionist Irma Vep. The compositions are uncluttered with a geometric attention to shapes and lines which, combined with the lighting, accentuates the effect of modern industrial architecture. The landscape is reminiscent of Scandinavia or the Netherlands, and although the film takes place in Canada, Paris, and London, this seems deliberate given the stark personal story contained within. (And Assayas' love of Ingmar Bergman.) The gray-blue backdrop that the lead character, recovering heroic addict Emily (Cheung), inhabits could represent the cold harshness of the uncaring world in which she must build her life and her tough, emotionally guarded way of doing so. It could also show a refreshing eagerness not to wallow in the excessively decadent visual clichés of a hundred other movies about heroin addicts in order to emphasize the emotional over the physical. Emily's desire to be with her son, Jay (James Dennis), is conveyed through brief silent gestures. While anticipating a weekend visit from him, a shot showing Emily preparing his bed, taken from outside the bedroom, touchingly captures the frustrated love coursing through her veins. What at first seems like unemotional behavior becomes a sign of deep inner strength. Occasionally the film is too reserved. Like Emily, Clean opens and closes its emotional valves at its own choosing, and not always where it should. The ending, wherein Emily sings a self-penned song in a recording studio, should be the denouement of this character, when we sense to the truest extent what this character has emotionally been through. Afterwards everyone around her seems to think she's done a great job and Emily acts exhausted, but the scene feels underplayed to a fault and tarnishes Cheung's otherwise wonderfully intimate performance. Emily's character, and Cheung's portrayal, is enhanced by Nick Nolte's pitch-perfect embodiment of her ex-husband Lee's father Albrecht. Nolte's grizzled warmth exudes love, patience, responsibility, and hard-won wisdom -- he's the ideal adult in a film where 40-year-olds still want to live like they're 20. In his first lengthy meeting with Emily, Albrecht's advice anchors the film, "I believe in forgiveness. People change. If they need to, they change." Documenting one person's potential for change is certainly an affecting idea and Assayas says he wanted to make Clean "extremely simple and universal as possible." What's at stake is whether or not Emily is disciplined enough to meet her own challenge and lead a straight life. For this character study to work, Emily needs to be an engrossing person, however selfish or unlikable her actions. Maggie Cheung is certainly more than talented and interesting enough for the role. Assayas' stylistic choices can make the action a little too reserved and underwhelming for the story, a too-tidy visual approach for a lead that staggers and stumbles through life. But overall Clean is still an affecting, carefully assembled drama. ~ Michael Buening, All Movie Guide
 



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