Gray's Anatomy

1996

Action / Comedy / Drama

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
580.02 MB
1280*682
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 20 min
P/S 0 / 1
1.2 GB
1920*1024
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 20 min
P/S 1 / 1

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by imseeg5 / 10

Another experimental Steven Soderbergh movie, that is not really a movie...but a contineous monologue about alternative treatments...

Director Steven Soderbergh, best known for the Ocean's Eleven / 12 / 13 etc movies, makes an experimental movie now and then. This is one of them, BUT...

The bad: this is not really a movie though, it is a contineous monologue from a dude I didnt know, but apparently is famous in America (apologies to the fans of this dude Spalding Gray).

The monologue isnt bad, but it is not really a movie. And I wanted to see a MOVIE.

Not any good then? For anyone interested in watching a documentary with a comical look at alternate treatments for eye diseases THIS is your pick. Especially the real life interviews with folks suffering from several forms of severe eye diseases or injuries, especially those personal stories are flabbergasting to listen to. But they only last about 20 minutes.

The rest of the movie is the same contineous monologue by this dude Spalding Gray, that may or may not interest you... I couldnt really be bothered. I'd rather listen to the radio...

Reviewed by Vance-117 / 10

A one-man bundle of neuroses

But that's why some people love Spalding Gray. And although I do not fall into that category, per se, I was very entertained by this 80-minute monologue -- told in ranting New Yorker mannerisms that are nonetheless fairly endearing -- about what Gray should do about his macular pucker.

The macular pucker, we learn in great detail, is an eye condition that must ultimately be "scraped" in order to restore normal vision. Gray, a born Christian Scientist and an enduring doctor-phobe, walks around New York City, tearing his hair out while choosing among the opinions of an array of quacks who weigh in on the issue. (Or, at least, he describes himself doing this -- the whole film is a series of closeups of Gray in a studio, with various visual stimuli applied to him, through the wonderful direction of the visionary Steven Soderbergh). Through the course of the narrative he describes near-slapstick visits to a Native American sweat lodge, a Phillipino doctor who is the Elvis of healers, a quirky New Jersey "dietary opthalmologist" and several others. It's all told with great storytelling verve, and occasional moments of poignancy.

The film also consists of a series of short documentary interviews with about 8 survivors of eye trauma, who each nearly lost (or in some cases did) vision in stomach-churning ways. Their occasional thoughts on the healing process are very fascinating.

Because of its odd structural format, the one-man narrative film threatens to fall by the wayside. Not that it has ever been a particularly popular form, but its appeal is perhaps dwindling further as our attention spans, and ability to sit through prolonged stories, deteriorate. However, Gray, with a boost from Soderbergh, gives the genre a good name -- and hope

Reviewed by framptonhollis10 / 10

so damn brilliant!

Like the greatest, most professional poet, Spalding Gray tells him stories at a swift, rhythmic pace that is exciting and brilliant all at once. With his pitch perfect timing and comedic wit, he weaves together here a masterpiece of the monologue as he recounts his bizarre, eye opening (yes, pun intended) adventure after he discovered he had an eye problem. Rather than simply accepting a surgery (he really doesn't like it when the doctors refer to their work as "scraping"),he attempts to work out alternative methods, which range from an all raw vegetable diet to traveling to the Philippians to visit a so called "psychic surgeon".

As a master of the monologue, Gray tells this story miraculously well. He writes with a beautiful and distinct quality. Through his storytelling, he expresses himself in a truly unique and entertaining way, packing this one man show with laughs and personality.

I must also praise the director, the famous Steven Soderbergh, who morphs this monologue into a visually stunning art film. Using music, sound, sets, props, camera movement, shadows, and plenty of other fascinating, experimental techniques, he turns Gray's witty writings into a much more cinematic and epic adventure that truly captures Gray's quirky and strange view of life.

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