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Chapter 27
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First-time writer/director Jarrett Schaeffer takes the reins for this haunting look at the mental collapse of Mark David Chapman in the days leading up to the murder of legendary musician John Lennon. Jared Leto stars as the man whose awe of Lennon and unrelenting drive to achieve infamy pushed him to pull the trigger on the former Beatle, and Lindsay Lohan stars as the devoted Lennon fan who befriended the killer on that fateful New York weekend. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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rebelprince89rebelprince89 Where do the Central Park ducks ...
by rebelprince89 in rebelprince89 Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Mark David Chapman is one of the darkest figures of modern time. He is the man who wanted to be famous, to be the next Holden Caulfield so bad, he killed John Lennon. And now, there is a movie about him. How do you approach Chapman's clearly deranged psyche and then make a movie out of it? Well, first, you go for the motives. Although the movie only spawns the infamous three days of Caulfield's life, there is enough implied background for us to begin to understand this character. " [More]
raydangerraydanger Go Inside The Criminal Mind Wit ...
by raydanger in raydanger Blog
loved it.
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"I saw this movie at a film festival recently and it ended up being my favorite movie that weekend. Chapter 27 tells the fictional story of John Lennon's assasin Mark David Chapman. The title comes from a reference to A Catcher In The Rye, which only had 26 chapters. In many ways, according to the movie, Mark David Chapman's journey mirrors that of Holden Caulfield. Any body who thought they should have made a movie version of Catcher In The Rye by now should take a look a " [More]
spiritstereospiritstereo Disrespect for Lennon aside...
by spiritstereo in spiritstereo Blog
disliked it.
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"One of the more interesting parts of the advertising campaign for this movie is that it tries to blame the negative response and lack of U.S. distributor on John Lennon fans boycotting the film on principle.This seems absurd mostly because that sort of controversy tends to be nothing but good news for a film - all except for poorly constructed vanity projects like this one. Yeah, Leto gained 60 pounds for "Chapter 27", and he definitely looks it. And you heard rig " [More]
mercurialmercurial Worst Trailer
by mercurial in Trailer Park
"Probably the worst trailer I've seen recently was for Chapter 27. I'm fairly certain a film about John Lennon's assassin isn't suppose to incite hysterical laughter which is exactly what happened when I saw the trailer for it. For whatever reason I'm still tempted to see the film, but just to mock Jared Leto for saying that gaining the weight for the film made him suicidal. [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
disliked it.
In the opening minutes of the sodden Chapter 27, Jared Leto's Mark David Chapman lets the audience know what he's not going to talk about -- namely, the parental abuse and other childhood horrors that turned him into John Lennon's future assassin. Writer-director J.P. Schaefer thereby forces his audience to draw all the conclusions they're supposed to draw from just those decisive 48 hours in December 1980, as Chapman skulks around the outside of the Dakota and creeps out those who try to extend him any kindness. Not only is this incredibly boring, but because Chapman is so steeped in his own crazy-speak (he thinks he's Holden Caulfield from Catcher in the Rye), it doesn't provide much of a linear explanation for his anger toward Lennon, if that's even what it is. Of course, psychosis is rarely linear, but this is where most other films throw the viewer a bone via some sort of cause-and-effect exposition. Here, we're left only with Leto's drawled, self-aggrandizing narration, and 84 interminable minutes shifting between the Dakota-area sidewalks, Chapman's hotel room and a local coffee shop. Schaefer's script may be dead on arrival, but Leto is the bigger disappointment, especially for those intrigued by the physical transformation he's undergone to play the dumpy Chapman. Leto's actorly commitment itself may lend him additional credibility, but he squanders it through his indistinct portrayal, which joins a tradition of vaguely Southern loonies whose simplistic musings are supposed to leave the viewer cold. Chapter 27's viewers are left cold alright, but for all the wrong reasons. It's clear Schaefer proceeded without cooperation from Lennon's estate, as there's not a note heard, nor more than a fleeting glimpse of the man himself. That emptiness may be what viewers are supposed to feel; total disengagement, however, is not. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 

Community ratings

mavens
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lost interest.
most people
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are neutral about it.

Other opinions

amymarie93
amymarie93
loved it.
raydanger
raydanger
loved it.
crossfertilization
crossfertilization
loved it.
Yinali
Yinali
lost interest.
CassieAnnette
CassieAnnette
lost interest.
marincat
marincat
is not interested.