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Unsane [Blu-ray]
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Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
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Return this item for free
Free returns are available for the shipping address you chose. You can return the item for any reason in new and unused condition: no shipping charges
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Purchase options and add-ons
Genre | Drama, Horror, DVD Movie, Blu-ray Movie, Action & Adventure/Thrillers |
Format | Color, NTSC, Digital_copy, Subtitled, Widescreen |
Contributor | Jonathan Bernstein, James Greer, Juno Temple, Amy Irving, Aimee Mullins, Joshua Leonard, Steven Soderbergh, Claire Foy, Jay Pharoah, Joseph Malloch See more |
Language | English |
Runtime | 1 hour and 39 minutes |
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Product details
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
- Product Dimensions : 6.75 x 5.25 x 0.55 inches; 3.52 ounces
- Director : Steven Soderbergh
- Media Format : Color, NTSC, Digital_copy, Subtitled, Widescreen
- Run time : 1 hour and 39 minutes
- Release date : June 19, 2018
- Actors : Claire Foy, Joshua Leonard, Jay Pharoah, Juno Temple, Aimee Mullins
- Subtitles: : Spanish, French Canadian
- Producers : Joseph Malloch
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 5.1), English (DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1)
- Studio : Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
- ASIN : B07BF9XR1W
- Writers : Jonathan Bernstein, James Greer
- Number of discs : 2
- Best Sellers Rank: #47,885 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #1,139 in Mystery & Thrillers (Movies & TV)
- #2,041 in Horror (Movies & TV)
- #3,967 in Drama Blu-ray Discs
- Customer Reviews:
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Unsane [Blu-ray]
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Indeed, Unsane is extremely timely. Not to mention absorbing.
I began viewing it because I was curious about the iPhone cinematography, intending to glance at a few mins, then perhaps watch it all another night. But I was almost immediately paralyzed with interest, as I became utterly absorbed in the story and in the main character played by the truly remarkable Claire Foy.
I highly recommend Soderbergh's (and Foy's) Unsane to anyone who wants to watch a highly intelligent, socially- and politically-conscious movie which doesn't fit easily into any genre category. At different points, the film is a drama, a mystery, a thriller, and a horror movie. It even ventures into dark, almost-comedic, satire territory during Matt Damon's cameo. (I'd like to say his performance is over the top, but I fear — my friend, fear — that there are people out there just like his character, performing just that service.)
If one has paid attention to news over the past couple years, one will recognize that the movie very is timely in regard to two different concerns — two different problems which have received national news coverage. To say much more might spoil things. But if you pay attention very very early in the movie, you'll get a hint about one of the things the movie (ie- Soderbergh, Foy, et al) is concerned about. And, the closing scene reinforces this particular concern in the strongest, and most empathetic way possible.
There are some very sociopathic people working in those places all the way up the chain of command. I worked as an independent advocate for many years and have seen just about everything from sexual abuse, to white collar fraud, inappropriate restraint, forced drugging, people's children taken away because of false statements in patients' records, people held as political prisoners, sabotage of people's court hearings, inappropriate and exploitative relationships that continued outside the hospital, and even murder swept under the rug. You see things you can never unsee when you are in the advocacy field.
This movie brought back alot of memories of those days and it had my heart pounding. I think it did a very good job of portraying how such experiences can make a person question their own sanity and what's real and what's not because sometimes life really is stranger than fiction and makes you do a double-take. One can really develop PTSD from having those kinds of experiences, so I can see where it may have changed the main character in this story and made her a different person than she had been previously because she had to do certain things to survive that she never thought she was capable of.
There were certain scenes that obviously were exaggerated for effect and shock value, but I think it was a kind of artistic license to get us to see things from her point of view. No real psychiatric unit houses men and women sleeping in the same room, but they probably did that just to illustrate the total lack of boundaries in that setting. There is a whole different culture in such places and that may have been a way to drive that point home.