Bounce (2000)
Facts
| Directed by | Don Roos |
| Cast | Ben Affleck, Gwyneth Paltrow, Natasha Henstridge, Edward Edwards, Jennifer Grey, Caroline Aaron, Tony Goldwyn, Alex D Linz, Joe Morton and Sam Robards |
| Theatrical Release | November 15, 2000 |
| DVD Release | April 10, 2001 |
| Running Time | 106 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| UPC Code | 786936144765 |
| Buy this item | $13.49 at Amazon.com As of Dec 31 0:50 EST (details) 2 DVD, Buena Vista Home Video, Usually ships in 24 hours, Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 5.1), French (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), Spanish (Subtitled) Or 35 new from $5.50, 98 used from $0.20, 4 collectible from $14.99 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Full of surprises |
| Offensive and Disturbing |
Ben Affleck's character is a horrible person. He only gives up his plane ticket in order to get laid, he stalks and lies to Gwyneth Paltrow's character. He sleeps with her before even telling her that he knew her husband, yet alone mentioning that he gave her husband the ticket on the crashed plane. Then-I think the worst part-he lies to her son saying that the deceased father did not express any desire to be with his son. He denys that the father said he wanted to fly home to spend time with his son selling Christmas trees. The son is obviously hurt and this lie in no way benefits anyone. Affleck's character does it out of pure malice.
SPOILER::: In the end poor Gwyneth ends up with this psycho and we can assume that the poor boys have to deal with this manipulative stalker, pathological lier and selfish #@$^#&%#. Do not see this movie. It is horrible!!! June 15, 2008
| Would you fly on an outfit named "Infinity Air"? |
Plot and writing. Look, as I've mentioned before in a different context, one coincidence is a great plot device: a young man sees a woman about to throw herself into the ocean and saves her; a cop sees a murder suspect walking down the street; an Army private who later becomes an officer finds out his first sergeant is his old drill instructor. Great. Pile on the coincidences though, and what you have is nothing more than lazy and unfocused writing. Such is the case here. SPOILER ALERT. Affleck's Buddy Amaral not only switches places with Gwyneth Paltrow's loving husband* on a flight that crashes, but he's involved in the airline's business AND there just happens to be a video of Amaral with the loving husband that just happens to appear at a crucial moment.
This movie does not do service to the "from airplane disaster to romance" genre. About the only thing to its credit is the unlikely achievement of making "Random Hearts" look good.
* I'm assuming Greg Janello is a loving husband. If you were married to Gwyneth Paltrow, wouldn't *you* be loving? March 28, 2008
| warm and sweet |
The basic plotline is this: Ben Affleck plays a vibrant, young man with a promising career named Buddy who gives up his plane ticket to a man he meets at the airport for a night with a beautiful blond. As fate would have it, the plane has a deadly crash killing all the passengers on board including Buddy's acquaintance. To make up for the guilt, Buddy seeks out the widow of this acquaintance, played by Gwyneth Paltrow. Although, Buddy's intentions were merely to help the family and disappear, in the midst of his guilt, he sees past the grief and falls in love with this beautiful woman.
I believe the script, the directing, and the acting were all very successful in this film. Gwyneth Paltrow and Ben Affleck were very believable and the gradual growth in their relationship was very real. Gwyneth's performance was quite amazing. Peronally this is one of my favorite performances by her. She allows Abby to be vulnerable and emotional yet her strength and virtues are consistent throughout the movie. The credit goes to both Gwyneth and the write/director, Don Roos for this. The director seemed to have paid much attention to the details, especially with the two characters in their behavior.
Five stars! March 4, 2007
| Excellent Film |
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