S1m0ne
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| S1m0ne | |
|---|---|
S1m0ne film poster |
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| Directed by | Andrew Niccol |
| Produced by | Andrew Niccol Daniel Lupi (co-producer) |
| Written by | Andrew Niccol |
| Starring | Al Pacino Catherine Keener Rachel Roberts |
| Distributed by | New Line Cinema |
| Release date(s) | 23 August 2002 |
| Running time | 117 min |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| IMDb profile | |
S1m0ne (also spelled Simone) is a 2002 science fiction drama film written, produced and directed by Andrew Niccol, starring Al Pacino.
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When the main star of disillusioned director Viktor Taransky's new movie walks away, Taransky is forced to find a replacement or never work again. Unfortunately for him, nobody wants to work with him any more.
Viktor tries a new computer program on a hard disk he inherited from his acquaintance Hank Aleno (whom Viktor has only met twice: at a conference eight years earlier and just before Aleno dies). Viktor uses the program as a last, desperate attempt to finish the film. The system allows him to use a computer-generated woman to play the movie's central character. Viktor names his synthetic actress "Simone", a name derived from the computer program's title, "Simulation One". Seamlessly incorporated into the movie, Simone gives a fantastic performance. The studio, and soon the world, starts to ask "who is Simone?"—the entire world thinking that she is a real person.
It soon becomes clear that Simone is a star, and Viktor decides not to mention that she is computer-generated. However, his scheme quickly spirals out of control as he has to try and make her have some elements of a real life too in order to maintain his story.
Getting sick of the attention she needs, and thus having to come up with the fake interviews and attend press conferences, he attempts to ruin her reputation by having her direct a disgusting film of her own about zoophilia. When this fails, he kills her off, hoping that his regained fame would carry through without her, only to get arrested for her murder.
Eventually, and with the help of his family, he decides to keep Simone "alive" and even starts a virtual family with her.
- Al Pacino - Viktor Taransky
- Catherine Keener - Elaine Christian
- Evan Rachel Wood - Lainey Christian
- Rachel Roberts - Simone
- Winona Ryder - Nicola Anders
- Jay Mohr - Hal Sinclair
- Pruitt Taylor Vince - Max Sayer
- Jason Schwartzman - Milton
- Elias Koteas - Hank Aleno (uncredited)
- Rebecca Romijn - Faith (uncredited)
Most of the names in the film are chosen for their link with computers. The title could be interpreted as "simulation number one" and includes both numbers of the binary number system. Other characters in the film are named after computer companies: Corel, Claris, Dell, Hewlett, Mac and Lotus. Simone's costar (Jay Mohr) is named Hal Sinclair, after the computer HAL 9000 from 2001: A Space Odyssey. Viktor Taransky is named after the Victor 9000.
The movie is inspired by Ray Kurzweil, specifically Kurzweil's 2001 TED Conference presentation of his female alter ego, Ramona. The scene in which Viktor performs a concert is modeled very closely with Kurzweil's Ramona presentation.
The film producers thought of using an actual computer-generated character to play the part of Simone. After discussions with the Screen Actors Guild, who were worried that the replacement of all actors would be the next inevitable step, they decided to use an unknown actress in the role and make her look slightly less realistic in post-production. Pre-release publicity issued to news media actually did suggest that a completely computer-generated actress would be used. Rachel Roberts, the Canadian fashion model who played the role, was not initially credited in the movie (her credit was added for the home video release; in the theatrical release "Simone" was credited as "herself"), and she worked under the pseudonym "Anna Green" during production. The actress is actually referred to by this pseudonym in a behind-the-scenes featurette included on the DVD release.
According to The Truman Show director Peter Weir, he sees real life prototype for Viktor in 'S1m0ne' as entertainer Michael Jackson: "And Michael Jackson, he is also the real life Victor in 'Simone'. He had a talent and all he wanted was to share this and bring people happiness and escapism through entertainment. And people turn it around, they make it about the individual rather than the creation. It is the actual films, the actual music - that's what it's all about... People lose sight of this and the media make it all about the celebrity." [1]
Critics generally panned the movie -- Metacritic reports that the average reviewer scored the film 49/100.
The movie was also a financial failure. Opening weekend saw poor sales of $3.8 million from nearly 2,000 theaters. S1m0ne ended up with $19,576,023 worldwide, which was among Al Pacino's lowest grossing movies.
- Amalgamated Film Studios, website for the fictional film studio in the film
- www.viktortaransky.com, website for Pachino's character Viktor Taransky
- I Am Pig, website for Simone's fictional movie I Am Pig
- Eternity Forever, website for fictional film Eternity Forever
- Sunrise Sunset, website for fictional film Sunrise Sunset
- For Hank, tribute to fictional character Hank
- S1m0ne at the Internet Movie Database
- S1m0ne at Rotten Tomatoes
- Reflections on S1m0ne by Ray Kurzweil