The Science of Sleep

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Critics' Reviews

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Movie Title
Avg. Score
1.
Blind Side, The
2.
Twilight Saga: New Moon, The
6.
49
Metascore
®
70
Generally favorable reviews
out of 100
'Science of Sleep' Is a Tepid Dream
By David Germain, Associated Press

Michel Gondry makes more interesting films when he's chasing through screenwriter Charlie Kaufman's playful thoughts than his own.

Gondry's "The Science of Sleep" is pure whimsy presented with a childlike lack of guile yet piled on so thickly the movie becomes less a story and more an exercise in caprice for its own sake.

Writer-director Gondry's tale of a man-child (Gael García Bernal) seesawing between his harmlessly demented fantasy world and a stifling outer life is filled with clever, dreamy visuals.

But the emotionally stunted hero feels as artificial as the makeshift props Gondry weaves into the man's weird alternate reality. The trappings and characters have no purpose except as playthings in Gondry's cinematic sandbox, which he uses to create a semi-autobiographical world that clearly has deep meaning for him but is little more than a jumble of loosely connected images to anyone else.

Fun images, yes. Meaningful, no.

In superficial fashion, "The Science of Sleep" retraces many of the same reality vs. fantasy themes examined far more richly in Gondry's "The Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind," for which the Oscar-winning screenplay was written by Kaufman from a story he developed with Gondry and Pierre Bismuth.

Bernal stars as Stephane, a man whose vivid dreams of a cloistered personal world gradually are taking precedence over the drab, disappointing future shaping up in his real life.

While sleeping, he's master of "Stephane TV," a television studio built from cardboard boxes, shower curtains and other found objects, the set resembling something a lonely, imaginative child might cobble together to make himself the star of his own universe.

In his dreams, Stephane is host of a cooking show in which he mixes together strange thoughts and observations with memories old and new to formulate his unconscious ramblings.

In actual life, Stephane has just come home to Paris, where his mother has landed him what's supposed to be a job designing calendars, an artistic endeavor that could be a waking means of applying his pent-up creativity.

The job turns out to be little more than a typesetting gig, though, and Stephane begins retreating further into his dreamscapes. (Gondry himself once held a similar job, and the movie was shot in a building where he lived in Paris while employed there.)

Stephane finds a potential anchor to draw him back to the conscious world when he meets his new neighbor, Stephanie (Charlotte Gainsbourg), and her friend Zoe (Emma de Caunes).

A sweetly chaste kinship develops between Stephane and Stephanie, their similar names part of Gondry's warm and fuzzy stab at examining themes of duality and synchronicity.

Bernal and Gainsbourg have the easy, natural rapport of a little boy and girl who meet on a playground and instantly decide to take up a game of make-believe.

Much of the story putters about pointlessly as Stephane briefly maintains a tiresome little deception with Stephanie and Zoe and has amusing but ineffectual encounters with his eccentric co-workers (Alain Chabat, Aurelia Petit and Sacha Bourdo).

They all get churned into Stephane's dreams, which grow increasingly indistinguishable from his everyday life.

Gondry crafts some deceptively simple and wonderfully inventive sets, effects and animated sequences. There are delightful moments, including Stephane's demonstration of a time machine that, with a hiccuping flourish, transports people a single second into the past or future.

But the individual moments feel disconnected, the movie playing out like a compilation of Gondry's innovative music videos. "The Science of Sleep" entertains in a fleeting way, and, no doubt, it's all deeply personal for Gondry. For the rest of us, it's like sleepwalking through someone else's tepid dream.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Michel Gondry makes more interesting films when he's chasing through screenwriter Charlie Kaufman's playful thoughts than his own.

Gondry's "The Science of Sleep" is pure whimsy presented with a childlike lack of guile yet piled on so thickly the movie becomes less a story and more an exercise in caprice for its own sake.

Writer-director Gondry's tale of a man-child (Gael García Bernal) seesawing between his harmlessly demented fantasy world and a stifling outer life is filled with clever, dreamy visuals.

But the emotionally stunted hero feels as artificial as the makeshift props Gondry weaves into the man's weird alternate reality. The trappings and characters have no purpose except as playthings in Gondry's cinematic sandbox, which he uses to create a semi-autobiographical world that clearly has deep meaning for him but is little more than a jumble of loosely connected images to anyone else.

Fun images, yes. Meaningful, no.

In superficial fashion, "The Science of Sleep" retraces many of the same reality vs. fantasy themes examined far more richly in Gondry's "The Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind," for which the Oscar-winning screenplay was written by Kaufman from a story he developed with Gondry and Pierre Bismuth.

Bernal stars as Stephane, a man whose vivid dreams of a cloistered personal world gradually are taking precedence over the drab, disappointing future shaping up in his real life.

While sleeping, he's master of "Stephane TV," a television studio built from cardboard boxes, shower curtains and other found objects, the set resembling something a lonely, imaginative child might cobble together to make himself the star of his own universe.

In his dreams, Stephane is host of a cooking show in which he mixes together strange thoughts and observations with memories old and new to formulate his unconscious ramblings.

In actual life, Stephane has just come home to Paris, where his mother has landed him what's supposed to be a job designing calendars, an artistic endeavor that could be a waking means of applying his pent-up creativity.

The job turns out to be little more than a typesetting gig, though, and Stephane begins retreating further into his dreamscapes. (Gondry himself once held a similar job, and the movie was shot in a building where he lived in Paris while employed there.)

Stephane finds a potential anchor to draw him back to the conscious world when he meets his new neighbor, Stephanie (Charlotte Gainsbourg), and her friend Zoe (Emma de Caunes).

A sweetly chaste kinship develops between Stephane and Stephanie, their similar names part of Gondry's warm and fuzzy stab at examining themes of duality and synchronicity.

Bernal and Gainsbourg have the easy, natural rapport of a little boy and girl who meet on a playground and instantly decide to take up a game of make-believe.

Much of the story putters about pointlessly as Stephane briefly maintains a tiresome little deception with Stephanie and Zoe and has amusing but ineffectual encounters with his eccentric co-workers (Alain Chabat, Aurelia Petit and Sacha Bourdo).

They all get churned into Stephane's dreams, which grow increasingly indistinguishable from his everyday life.

Gondry crafts some deceptively simple and wonderfully inventive sets, effects and animated sequences. There are delightful moments, including Stephane's demonstration of a time machine that, with a hiccuping flourish, transports people a single second into the past or future.

But the individual moments feel disconnected, the movie playing out like a compilation of Gondry's innovative music videos. "The Science of Sleep" entertains in a fleeting way, and, no doubt, it's all deeply personal for Gondry. For the rest of us, it's like sleepwalking through someone else's tepid dream.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

80
Washington Post: Desson Thomson
Never intends to be deeper than a magician's hat, and its wonderfully low-tech stop-motion technique is not only a nod to Czech animator Jan Svankmajer but a tacit rebuke to computer-graphics-heavy fantasies such as "The Chronicles of Narnia" or the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy.Read Full Review »
80
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Carina Chocano
It's rare for young actors to exude as much charisma and charm as Gainsbourg and García Bernal.Read Full Review »
80
Salon.com: Andrew O'Hehir
No one who sees it will confuse it with anything else. Fans of Gondry's DIY low-tech aesthetic, which he blends, as always, with exceptionally sophisticated animation techniques, will adore it.Read Full Review »
80
Slate: Dana Stevens
To me, the movie feels like a small but ingeniously crafted gift.Read Full Review »
80
Village Voice: J. Hoberman
Sweet, crazy, and tinged with sadness, Michel Gondry's new feature The Science of Sleep is a wondrous concoction.Read Full Review »
75
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
Fusing animation and live action with a series of outrageous props, Gondry veers dangerously close to being precious. But make no mistake: Gondry's hallucinatory brilliance holds you in thrall.Read Full Review »
75
USA Today: Claudia Puig
The look of the film is dazzling, even hallucinatory, and the concept is beyond quirky as conceived by Gondry, a talented visual stylist, in his first film based on his own script. The story is compelling, unconventional and diverting in its blurring of reality and fantasy.Read Full Review »
75
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
This pop-up book of a film is an ideal arrangement between director and star.Read Full Review »
75
Philadelphia Inquirer: Carrie Rickey
Unlike Gondry's previous features, Human Nature and Eternal Sunshine, Science lacks the sturdy armature of a Charlie Kaufman screenplay to support its eccentricities. The flood of delight in the film's first 90 minutes slowed to a trickle and, finally, a drip.Read Full Review »
70
The New York Times: A.O. Scott
So while The Science of Sleep may not, in the end, be terribly deep, it is undoubtedly -- and deeply -- refreshing.Read Full Review »
See all The Science of Sleep reviews at metacritic.com »