Domestic abuse has been portrayed on film before but never with this much complexity.
Take My Eyes (2006)
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Reviews Counted:33
Fresh:30
Rotten:3
Average Rating:7.6/10
Consensus: Graced with effective performances, Take My Eyes compellingly explores the subject of domestic abuse while avoiding simplistic characterizations.
Theatrical Release:Mar 17, 2006 Limited
Synopsis: A couple breaks up after the husband's violent and abusive nature finally becomes too much for his wife, but the breakup becomes a rebuilding experience for both of them as they pick up the... A couple breaks up after the husband's violent and abusive nature finally becomes too much for his wife, but the breakup becomes a rebuilding experience for both of them as they pick up the tattered remains of their lives. TAKE MY EYES won seven prestigious Goya Awards--the Spanish equivalent of the Oscars. [More]
Starring: Laia Marull, Luis Tosar, Candela Pena, Rosa Maria Sarda
Starring: Laia Marull, Luis Tosar, Candela Pena, Rosa Maria Sarda, Sergi Calleja, Kiti Manver, Nicolas Fernandez Luna, David Mooney, Elisabet Gelabert, Elena Irureta, Chus Gutierrez
Director: Iciar Bollain
Director: Iciar Bollain
Composer: Alberto Iglesias
Studio: New Yorker Films
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Reviews for Take My Eyes
Every element of the production is well-crafted. Take My Eyes is highly recommended.
Approaching potentially unpleasant subject matter with humor, intelligence and deep compassion for its flawed yet infinitely human characters, Take My Eyes is almost certain to rank as one of the year's best films.
Actors Laia Marull and Luis Tosar explore the intricate details of a relationship based on the laws of attraction and repulsion, in which the intellect is repeatedly devastated by primal passion.
What makes the movie fascinating is that it doesn't settle for a soap opera resolution to this story, with Pilar as the victim, Antonio as the villain, and evil vanquished. It digs deeper and more painfully.
Though deceptively straightforward in its exploration of the causes and effects of domestic abuse, Take My Eyes benefits from the grubby verisimilitude Bollaín brings to his material, which otherwise might have lapsed into movie-of-the-week superficiality
This tale of domestic abuse breaks little new stylistic or psychological ground, but it is a searing, well-acted drama that should strike universal chords.
The performances from Marull and Tosar ... are superbly nuanced, carefully tweaking your emotions until they ensure that Take My Eyes is one of the most moving films you'll see this year.
This small, somber drama says things to battered women they probably already know. What it says to their abusers -- of any country or culture -- they can't afford to ignore.
We emerge worn but wiser, having stepped, if only momentarily, and secondarily, into the shoes of the brutalized.
The story isn't exactly new, but Bollain, an actress in her own right, keeps Take My Eyes from sinking into clichés.
Handles the subject of domestic violence with intelligence and compassion.
If Take My Eyes explored how a woman could still feel for a man who abused her, it might have gripped us with its difficult truths.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 45% 45% | Ice Age: Dawn of the D… |
| 19% 19% | Transformers: Revenge … |
| 55% 55% | Orphan |
| 43% 43% | The Proposal |
| 26% 26% | Land of the Lost |
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 52% 52% | The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 |
| 37% 37% | G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra |
| 14% 14% | I Love You, Beth Cooper |
| 97% 97% | Food, Inc. |
| 28% 28% | Aliens in the Attic |
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