SYNOPSICS
Dead Awake (2010) is a English movie. Omar Naim has directed this movie. Nick Stahl,Rose McGowan,Amy Smart,Ben Marten are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2010. Dead Awake (2010) is considered one of the best Fantasy,Mystery,Romance,Thriller movie in India and around the world.
Dead Awake (2010) Trailers
Same Actors
Same Director
Dead Awake (2010) Reviews
A really strange movie
"Dead Awake" is one of the strangest movies I have seen in quite some time. Obviously, it was inspired by "The Sixth Sense", though the mystery angle has been increased, as well as with its strangeness. It's directed in a really bizarre way, in an anonymous style (and with anonymous locations) that for the longest time made me think the movie was shot in a foreign country and the filmmakers were trying hard to disguise things. Stranger, however, is the screenplay. While the big questions the movie brings up are eventually answered, there are several minor questions that remained unanswered, like the mysterious policeman character at the beginning as well as the status of Nick Stahl's character at the end of the movie. While the movie is offbeat enough to make its ninety-two minutes never boring, in the end I feel most viewers will be unsatisfied because it doesn't quite give enough explanation.
Very Good Thriller/Fantasy
After seeing the low scores on this film, I was encouraged to write a review as this film is worthy of a Seven, not the Four or lower most viewers have given it. The film has an excellent cast including Nick Stahl (Of Terminator Fame), Rose McGowan, and Amy Smart (both extremely under-rated actresses who can do comedy, drama, horror, thrillers, you name it and extremely attractive without being model gorgeous at the same time) as well as two lesser known actors playing the Irish "parent substitutes" for Nick Stahl's character, Dylan. The film is basically a thriller that leaves you guessing as to Dylan's fate. Is he alive or dead? Is he talking to ghosts? This has been compared by other reviewers to "Sixth Sense" and I would agree. In essence, Dylan still hasn't come to terms with the death of his parents and assisting a crack addict, Charlie (Rose McGowan) finds redemption as does she. Meanwhile, with Charlies guidance, he rediscovers his old high school sweetheart, Natalie (Amy Smart), and is able to rekindle a romance that should never have ended. So what does this film offer? It keeps you guessing as an excellent thriller should; the presence of the ?undead? and the fact Dylan works in a funeral home lend an element of fantasy, mystery, and eeriness; the rekindled relationship and flashbacks with Natalie provide romance; and most of all, all of the three main characters achieve some form of redemption. Seven Stars, would recommend to anyone and would watch again.
A surprisingly good "Sixth Sense" type movie. Really good twist at the end that make you want to watch it again. I say B+
Ever wonder who would show up at your funeral? After attending a funeral for an old high school friend and running in to his ex-girlfriend (Amy Smart) Dylan (Stahl) comes up with a plan to stage his own death and hold a funeral for himself. When a strange crack addict (McGowan) shows up to see him his life takes a strange turn and nothing is what it seems. This movie is hard to explain without giving anything away, but the best way I can put it is that it is a cross between the "Sixth Sense" and "After.Life". I really enjoyed the movie and I'm not sure if it was because I had no expectations heading in or because it was actually a very good movie (if that makes sense). This is more of a drama then horror, in the same way the "Sixth Sense" could be categorized either way. I really liked the twist at the end, I honestly can predict about 95% of movies made lately and this one got me. I was very surprised at how much I liked it. I surprisingly give it a B+. Would I watch it again? - I would, if only to catch clues I missed the first time.
Shyamalan laughs at these filmmakers
Some people should not be allowed to watch The Sixth Sense. A prime example of that is the folks who made Dead Awake. It's the same principle as not letting young children view pornography. They're not intellectually or emotionally ready to understand it and can get a lot of screwed up ideas. Director Omar Naim and writers John Harrington, David Bolvin and Justin Urich got the impression they were as talented as M. Night Shyamalan and could do the same things he did with his ghost story masterpiece. I could believe someone thinking they're as good as Shyamalan after watching Lady in the Water, but for this bunch seeing The Sixth Sense was like an 10 year old viewing Butt Bandits #27. Their attempts at mimicry are painful and damaging to everyone involved. Dylan (Nick Stahl) is a 28 year old insomniac with a job at a funeral home and not much else. He's haunted by visions of a taxi cab accident 10 years ago, though he should probably be more tormented by the lame haircut he sports through this film. After running into his ex-girlfriend Natalie (Amy Smart) at the funeral of one of their high school classmates, Dylan is depressed and feels like a nothing. To cheer him up, his relentlessly Irish boss (Brian Lynner) stages a fake funeral for Dylan to see if anyone shows up. The only people who do are Natalie and a squirrelly girl from Skid Row named Charlie (Rose McGowan). Since Natalie has been dating a douchebag for most of the last decade, Dylan turns his attention to the mysterious Charlie and follows her to her slumhole of an apartment. It turns out Charlie is a sketchy junkie who thinks Dylan is a ghost who believes he's alive and needs to make his final amends before moving on, which inevitably leads to Dylan and Natalie reconnecting and the only thing that might surprise you after that point in the story is how ineptly and inartfully it's all done. There are so many things to criticize in Dead Awake. From Nick Stahl and Brian Lynner acting as though they're in two entirely different movies, to the unnecessary camera movement and pointless visual tricks that herald a director who doesn't know what he's doing, to a soundtrack that belongs on one of those Saturday night atrocities on the SyFy channel, to dual plot twists that epically fail where The Sixth Sense succeeded, the list of mistakes, misjudgments and misery for the audience goes on and on and on. Let me focus on one specific flaw so you can get the overall flavor of how this movie sucks. As previously mentioned, Natalie is introduced as having a long-standing dillhole of a boyfriend (Ben Martin). For the first 5 minutes this guy is on screen, he does everything but drop kick a puppy to make the audience dislike him. Later on, the boyfriend sees Dylan and Natalie talking, with the old chemistry between them reigniting. Everything about that scene, how it's shot, the boyfriend's reactions, even the background music, it's all designed to elicit sympathy for the boyfriend as he sees the woman he loves slipping away from him. Except the boyfriend is a total jagoff and the viewer, up to that point, has been encouraged to want Natalie to dump his sorry ass. So, why should anyone care about his hurt feelings and why would the filmmakers want to make them care? There's bad storytelling, but this is like a psychotic break where the film completely forgets all that's happened to that point and all that's going to happen after that. I don't think I've ever watched another scene as out of tune, emotionally and dramatically, with the rest of a motion picture as this one. It would be like an orgy scene in a porno where everybody just stops for a minute and tries to sell the viewer Girl Scout cookies. Stahl, Amy Smart and Rose McGowan are much better than this material and its execution. The rest of the cast is in their proper element. I wish I would have slept through Dead Awake. There isn't any interesting awfulness here. It's plain vanilla bad. Skip it.
Dear God, It's Me Loren.
Holy crap this was terrible. It was not a thriller. It was barely a romantic movie because there was no real romancing, they just skipped straight to being back together. The music? OH GOD THE MUSIC WAS THE CHEESIEST THING SINCE KRAFT BLUE BOX. Plot twist had less twists than SOMETHING WITH NO TWISTS IN IT. Apparently I need more words to describe how bad this movie was. Apparently I need more words to describe how bad this movie was. Apparently I need more words to describe how bad this movie was. Apparently I need more words to describe how bad this movie was.