Frem Here To Awesome Festival
Advertisement

Brick
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Buy it now on DVD
Starting at $5.04
trailerWatch trailer

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement

Directed by Rian Johnson.
A tough-talking teen attempts to uncover his ex-girlfriend's killer in director Rian Johnson's hard-boiled high-school noir, told in the style of a Dashiell Hammett mystery. An outsider by nature, Brendan (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is forced to penetrate the elaborate ranks of the high-school social scene and its more insidious underbelly when the body of his former girlfriend Emily is found lying lifeless in a remote creek. Though the pair had been on the outs, Brendan can't seem to shake the hysterical phone call that he received from Emily the day before her body was discovered, a call in which she rattled off a number of cryptic words: "brick," "pin," "tug," "poor Frisco." He's determined to find the guilty party, and to do that he'll need to uncover the meaning behind her enigmatic phone call. From the highest-ranking athlete to the lowest-level burnout, no one is above suspicion of leaving her in that creek or putting her in the position to end up there. Brendan's skill for getting the right attention from the right people leads him to a local drug dealer of urban-legendary status (Lukas Haas), who walks with a cane and lives with his mother. As Brendan infiltrates the social and political web more deeply, his theory solidifies and each player's role becomes clear, from the shifty-eyed pot slinger to an upper-crust innocent who may well be a femme fatale. Brendan may soon be ready to make his case, even if it's too late for him to get out. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
[more]

Reviews and discussions

Write a review

JakeStevensJakeStevens Emo Noir (Actually Better Than ...
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I knew after seeing a preview of this film that I was going to like it, but I underestimated how much I would "actually" like it. Apart from Charlie Kaufman's oeveur, this is one of the most original films I've seen in years. Who would've thought that Joseph Gordon-Levitt could STAR in something this engaging? Not to mention it co-stars the beautiful Emilie de Ravin (even if she only appears from time to time), this is classic film noir genetically mutated into a modern-day emo high-schooler's existence. I love the muted, dreary, rainy-day look cinematographer Steve Yedlin has achieved here, turning Southern California into what appears to be somewhere like Seattle (or the mid-west, for that matter, but with more hills). I can see how it may alienate some viewers, but I think if you go into it with an open mind (and the subtitle option turned on, if you're not hep to noir-laden lingo), I think you'll enjoy this film as much as I did. Which was a lot. " [More]
indieabby88indieabby88 Re:Recasting THE BREAKFAST CLUB ...
by indieabby88 in Recasting couch
liked it.
"Alright, let's take a stab at this thing, shall we? Channing Tatum (Stop-Loss) - Andrew Clark Lou Taylor Pucci (Thumbsucker) - Brian Ralph Johnson Charlie Hunnam (Green Street Hooligans)- John Bender Kate Bosworth (21) -Claire Standish Nora Zehetner (Brick) -Allison Reynolds Vincent D'Onofrio -Richard Vernon Anthony Michael Hall- Carl " [More]
mercurialmercurial Re:Recasting THE BREAKFAST CLUB ...
by mercurial in Recasting couch
loved it.
"The Breakfast Club Brady Corbet - Andrew Clark (The Athlete) Jay Baruchel - Brian Ralph Johnson (The Brain) Mark Webber - John Bender (The Criminal) Blake Lively - Claire Standish (The Princess) Nora Zehetner - Allison Reynolds (The Basket Case) Paul Giamatti - Richard Vernon (The Principal) Scott Bakula - Carl (The Janitor) Brady Corbet (Funny Games) fits perfectly in the All-American Jock stereotype. Jay Baruchel (Almost Famous) plays the geek better than most. Mark Webber (Stroytelling) is a genuinely disaffected youth. Blake Lively (The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants) looks like a prom queen. Nora Zehetner (Brick) could definitely pull off the fragile, awkward loner. Paul Giamatti (Sideways) will bring a touch of class to the production as the irksome school principal. Scott Bakula (American Beauty) has that wisdom-spouting man with a mop quality that would be perfect for the janitor. " [More]
mercurialmercurial Re: Top Five Movies with Budget ...
by mercurial in Top 5
loved it.
"I unintentionally listed movies with budgets less than a million dollars. Oh well.Here we go:1.) Pink Flamingos - The minimal budget definitely made this film better. Following a group of sick and perverted individuals doing some of the most vomit-inducing things is heightened by the cinema verite, filmed on the streets style employed.2.) The Blair Witch Project - The bare bones budget adds to the build up of tension throughout the film. 3.) Brick - Outstanding cinematography, interesting dialogue and intricate (yet economical) sets weave together in this great little neo-noir.4.) Monsoon Wedding - Filmed on the streets of New Delhi and an isolated home on the outskirts, the movie is amazingly vibrant, yet intimate; magical, yet based in reality.5.) Halloween - Again, the limited budget gives the film an all too real feel that keeps you gripped with fear. And the score is undoubtedly one of the best. " [More]
chrismorrellchrismorrell for "brick" read "the package"
by chrismorrell in chrismorrell Blog
is neutral about it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I found myself preoccupied with the main conceit of this film..that is, the overt "Film Noir"/ Chandleresque(some say Hammet) dialogue,wherein , the main/sympathetic characters speak in a poetic, elliptical , knowing and wise-cracking style..Go with it ,and it is a familiar and enjoyable ride, with recognisable stock "noir" characters..the "femme fatale" , the geeky "expert" friend,and of course, the main character , the maverick "lone sleuth "/ "gumshoe", taking the law into his own hands, and getting beaten up a hell of alot,in the process....Joseph Gordon-Levitt is great,and this is enjoyable ,but nowhere near as good as it thinks it is... " [More]
oOCarolinaOooOCarolinaOo Mixed feelings.
by oOCarolinaOo in oOCarolinaOo Blog
is neutral about it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Upon seeing this film I generally liked it but after a day or two passed and the more I processed and deigested it, it became clear that the film was pretentious and confusing to the casual movie watcher. One of my problems with the film was the dialogue. I know it is a film and artistic license and all that jazz but most of what happened in the film was to unbelivable in the way it was portrayed. Overall it was a sweet and sour experience. " [More]
oOCarolinaOooOCarolinaOo Mixed feelings.
by oOCarolinaOo in oOCarolinaOo Blog
is neutral about it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Upon seeing this film I generally liked it but after a day or two passed and the more I processed and deigested it, it became clear that the film was pretentious and confusing to the casual movie watcher. One of my problems with the film was the dialogue. I know it is a film and artistic license and all that jazz but most of what happened in the film was to unbelivable in the way it was portrayed. Overall it was a sweet and sour experience. " [More]
peterfecteaupeterfecteau I really don't know
by peterfecteau in peterfecteau Blog
is neutral about it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"So last night a friend of mine brought over this movie, I hadn't heard of it. Didn't read the jacket, just popped it in and sat down. I was told it's Memento meets Kids meets Limey and that sounded pretty good so I had a positive intentention. Honestly I wasn't all that impressed but I really don't know what to think. It might still be setting in. It was very much a think piece, kind of subsurface. The acting was par but the characters were a little too fictional for my liking. Infact the whole plot seemed like it should exist outside of highschool and yet it didn't bother me. You really don't know what he's doing until he's done it even with the forshadowing in the first scene. I understood why the dialogue was so thick and the fact that they are in highschool made the dialogue reasonable. I do see why this was a sundance favorite. But if your not specifically into sundance/indi films specifically, beware. I feel that the film tried to hard at c ... " [More]
heartshapedheartheartshapedheart my favorite right now
by heartshapedheart in heartshapedheart Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"One evening I was walking downtown with my significant other. We have this theatre in my town that always plays an independant movie and changes it every week. I always sounded like a snob because at one point movies really became horrible. So horrible, I didn't want to see them anymore; this was the only place I would go.Anyway, I saw the name and it sounded intriguing. I knew nothing of the film before I saw it. As soon as it started I was taken into this world of noir. The language was difficult to understand the first time I saw it, but all that did was make this want inside me to watch it even more. The body language did all it could to assist the hard to understand language. I was taken in by the beauty of Brenden and his beliefs. All he did for that girl and the importance of her in his life seemed like something I couldn't ever imagine. I am young, but I will say that this movie changed my life and how I think of film. I have always loved theatre and inside had a s ... " [More]
glocksoutglocksout Brilliant concept, spectacular ...
by glocksout in glocksout Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Who says you need mega-dollar actors, special effects, and elaborate sets to create a compelling story? Writer/Director Rian Johnson managed to complete Brick for under $450,000. The utter brilliance of this film makes it difficult to even write about it, and every time I watch it I'm more intrigued with the characters. Joseph Gordon-Levitt really carries the film with his character Brenden's fearless quick-wit and carefully crafted lines. The whole cast, however, works together so well and the chemistry is as such that the exchange is so quick you really have to pay attention to catch all the wit. Johnson created this tale in the tradition of classic hardboiled detective stories the likes of The Maltese Falcon (even quoting this film), but placing the events in a suburban Southern Californian high school, giving this a unique modern edge. I don't really know if I can write anymore about Brick, you'll just have to discover this gem yourself. " [More]
[More reviews]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
A film noir that takes place at a high school sounds impossible to pull off. It smacks of a director mashing together disparate styles just to watch them clash. And yet, Brick transcends all of these trappings to become one of the best films in years. It might seem impossible, but only if you forget what the film noir approach really is. The style has become such a part of the historical lexicon, we start to characterize it through clichés, the superficial hallmarks that pop up in well-known examples. Soon we're defining it with the stereotyped voice-over narrative and pointlessly ambiguous dialogue that comedians employ when the audience calls out "film noir" on Whose Line Is It Anyway? But Brick goes to something much deeper; it relies on those well-worn artistic qualifiers only as they serve the story and all the characters in it, since they were all created in the noir world from the bottom up. What's far more fundamental to noir than its deadpan one-liners and femme fatales is the way it alludes to a dark, scary world that lurks just below the surface of the ordinary. Behind plain-looking streets, inscrutable men, and enigmatic women is a sinister web of deceit and betrayal, corruption and greed. Brick accomplishes this seamlessly, and makes the setting seem like a natural fit; the goings-on in high school can be just as arbitrary, complex, and potentially dangerous as drug-running or insurance fraud. The effortless use of rapid-fire slang -- a standard cinematic behavior both for 1930s gangsters and modern-day teenagers -- comes off as perfectly organic. The heroes of noir are flawed everymen, only smarter, quicker, and cooler, and leading actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt scores a home run in this role. His protagonist is bitingly intelligent and magnetically relatable, constantly prompting the audience to cheer him forward and fear for his peril. The real magic of film noir is how it subtly repaints its content, warping the frightening, brutal nature of the darkest human behavior and making it into something both dangerous and beautiful: the ultimate cool. The way Brick accomplishes this task is perhaps the most impressive of its feats. It avoids both gum-snapping trendiness and unreasonable characterizations, finding a middle ground where what you see is strange enough to draw you in but believable enough to keep you watching. ~ Cammila Albertson, All Movie Guide
 



Spout's Scavenger Hunt

Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
liked it.
most people
Most people
liked it.

Other opinions

patches
patches
loved it.
wonga
wonga
loved it.
JakeStevens
JakeStevens
loved it.
joshuac
joshuac
is not interested.
rica5tully
rica5tully
is not interested.
marincat
marincat
is not interested.