Flatliners – Heute ist ein schöner Tag zum Sterben (1990)

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Flatliners – Heute ist ein schöner Tag zum Sterben: Directed by Joel Schumacher. With Kiefer Sutherland, Julia Roberts, Kevin Bacon, William Baldwin. Five medical students experiment with “near death” experiences, until the dark consequences of past tragedies begin to jeopardize their lives.

“A medical student named Nelson (Kiefer Sutherland) hatches a plan to explore death by briefly killing himself in a controlled environment then having his friends bring him back to life minutes later. Four fellow students join in the plan, taking turns with their explorations, competing with one another to see who can stay u0026quot;underu0026quot; the longest. What will the consequences of this dangerous game be? Without a doubt, the premise of Flatliners is intriguing. I canu0026#39;t speak for the medical veracity of the idea–Iu0026#39;m sure itu0026#39;s ridiculous–but it doesnu0026#39;t need to be realistic to provide fodder for a good film. Unfortunately, this isnu0026#39;t a good film. Itu0026#39;s not quite failure, but itu0026#39;s damn close. Itu0026#39;s as if somewhere along the line the film was brought back from the dead, but with severe brain damage.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eOne of the primary problems that director Joel Schumacher does not overcome is that these actors just do not seem like medical students, and the setting just doesnu0026#39;t seem like a medical school. In addition to Sutherland, the other u0026quot;studentsu0026quot; are Julia Roberts, Kevin Bacon, William Baldwin and Oliver Platt. With the exception of Platt, the other four seem more like models who got lost on their way back from a Vogue shoot. Platt seems like an overacting fussbudget who got lost on his way to a Steven Spielberg set. Writer Peter Filardi gives them more model-like dialogue, except when theyu0026#39;re flatly reciting the medical terms theyu0026#39;ve memorized.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe u0026quot;schoolu0026quot;, for some bizarre reason, is an old church/monastery, filled with Gothic statuary and modern construction accoutrements, such as scaffolding and those thick, transparent plastic sheets they hang in doorways. It does look cool, but itu0026#39;s difficult to buy the set as a medical school.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThat might not usually be a problem for me–I love absurdism, after all, but the plot seems to hinge on the verisimilitude of the characters and their setting. What weu0026#39;re left with are actors going through u0026quot;medical studentu0026quot; ritual movements and speech as they work their way through a formulaic series of events. Formulaic because much of the film consists of the same scene over and over, our cast of pretty boys (and a beautiful girl) simply take turns around the chair of honor, a bit like theyu0026#39;re square dancing. The first time, when Nelson goes u0026quot;underu0026quot;, it may be pretty exciting, but by the fifth time, itu0026#39;s just more ritual–there is little suspense.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe genre listing claims that Flatliners is a combination of horror, thriller and sci-fi. None of those seem to fit the film very well, although superficially, it makes some sense. But the scenarios are really just drama heavily imbued with symbolism and metaphor. The u0026quot;fantasyu0026quot; elements are intriguing enough at that, but the gist of the film consists of characters having to adjust their karmic balances. Theyu0026#39;re trying to right various wrongs, or at least perceived wrongs, towards persons from their pasts. Itu0026#39;s fairly overt; there isnu0026#39;t much subtext here. The karmic imbalance material is the best of the film, but in a case of life reflecting art, Schumacher has a karmic imbalance himself–there is far too much empty ritual in the film and not enough meaty material.”

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