Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Widescreen
 - Dolby
 
  
 Description:
  While too many movies suffer the fate of creative bankruptcy, Being John Malkovich is a refreshing study in contrast, so  bracingly original that you'll want to send director Spike Jonze and  screenwriter Charlie Kaufman a thank-you note for restoring your faith  in the enchantment of film. Even if it ultimately serves little purpose  beyond the thrill of comedic invention, this demented romance is  gloriously entertaining, spilling over with ideas that tickle the brain and even touch the heart. That's to be expected  in a movie that dares to ponder the existential dilemma of a forlorn  puppeteer (John Cusack) who discovers a metaphysical portal into the  brain of actor John Malkovich. The puppeteer's working as a file clerk on the seventh-and-a-half floor  of a Manhattan office building; this idea alone might serve as the  comedic basis for an entire film, but Jonze and Kaufman are just  getting started. Add a devious coworker (Catherine Keener), Cusack's  dowdy wife (a barely recognizable Cameron Diaz), and a business scheme  to capitalize on the thrill of being John Malkovich, and you've got a  movie that just gets crazier as it plays by its own outrageous rules.  Malkovich himself is the film's pièce de résistance,  riffing on his own persona with obvious delight and--when he enters his  own brain via the portal--appearing with multiple versions of himself  in a tour-de-force use of digital trickery. Does it add up to much? Not  really. But for 112 liberating minutes, Being John Malkovich is  a wild place to visit. --Jeff Shannon
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