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Falling Down
Description
During the birthday of his daughter, an unemployed father struggles against meeting his daughter and spending the whole day with her, but life has another opinion, as he faces many challenges through his way, such as the traffic jam, that leads him to leave his car in the street, till his argument with the shop owner.
During the birthday of his daughter, an unemployed father struggles against meeting his daughter and spending the whole day with her, but life has another opinion, as he faces many challenges through his way, such as the traffic jam, that leads him to leave his car in the street, till his argument with the shop owner.
Actors:
Frederic Forrest,
John Fink,
Jorga Caye,
Lois Smith,
Bruce Beatty,
Richard Montoya,
D.W. Moffett
Frederic Forrest
23 December 1936, Waxahachie, Texas, USA
John Fink
11 February 1940, Detroit, Michigan, USA
Jorga Caye
17 December 1948, Upland, California, USA
Lois Smith
3 November 1930, Topeka, Kansas, USA
Bruce Beatty
Richard Montoya
D.W. Moffett
26 October 1954, Highland Park, Illinois, USA
Country:
United States, France, United Kingdom
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New York Times
May 20, 2003
It turns one man's slide toward madness into a wickedly mischievous, entertaining suspense thriller.
July 18, 2011
These adventures would be offensive if you could take them seriously, so it's probably good that you can't.
May 24, 2009
...holds up pretty well today, even if its tone meanders all over the place.
January 10, 2010
The character of William Foster (simply called D-Fens in the closing credits) represents an element of our collective id.
July 18, 2011
What makes this an innovative film is Joel Schumacher's bold eschewing of the good-guy-verses-bad-guy Hollywood convention.
January 26, 2006
Sometimes funny, sometimes touching, and certainly unnerving.
July 18, 2011
Let's face it, there is an element of truth in the character of D-FENS. But it is, finally, tabloid truth.
December 07, 2009
Atrociously written by actor Ebbe Roe Smith and atrociously directed (it goes without saying) by Joel Schumacher...
March 26, 2009
At first comes across like a mean-spirited black comedy and then snowballs into a reasonably powerful portrait of social alienation. The tone is unremittingly dour, however.
June 01, 2009
A heavy-handed potboiler, but as it raises the temperature, it does give cause to consider the line--so easily crossed--between social function and disasterous personal undoing. [Blu-ray]
March 31, 2008
A real artist could make something incisive or darkly hilarious out of this moral tightrope act. Schumacher, veering recklessly between social satire, kick-ass fantasy and damsel-in-distress melodrama, plays the game for opportunistic cheap thrills.
July 18, 2011
None of the characters ever rises beyond the level of his or her generic functions, and by the end the overall emptiness of the conception becomes fully apparent.

