Being Human (1994 film) explained

Being Human
Director:Bill Forsyth
Producer:Robert F. Colesberry
David Puttnam
Music:Michael Gibbs
Cinematography:Michael Coulter
Editing:Michael Ellis
Studio:Enigma Productions
Fujisankei
British Sky Broadcasting
NatWest Ventures
Distributor:Warner Bros.
Runtime:122 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Japan
Language:English
Gaelic
Friulian
Budget:$40 million
Gross:$5 million[1]

Being Human is a 1994 comedy-drama film written and directed by Bill Forsyth and starring Robin Williams, John Turturro, Bill Nighy, Vincent D'Onofrio, Robert Carlyle, Theresa Russell and Ewan McGregor in his feature-film debut. An international co-production of the United Kingdom and Japan, the film portrays the experience of a single human soul, portrayed by Williams, through various incarnations. Williams is the only common actor throughout the stories that span man's history on Earth.

An attempt on director-screenwriter Bill Forsyth's part to depict by visual means the ordinariness of life throughout the ages, Being Human is deliberately slow in its pace to emphasize how slow life often is. The structure is one of vignette-like character studies of one man (actually five distinct men, all with the same soul) who keeps making the same relationships and mistakes throughout his lifetimes.

Plot

In the first incarnation, a caveman's family is taken from him by raiders, due to his cowardice and hesitation. Before his wife is taken away, she shouts, "Don't lose the children!".

The next incarnation is in ancient Rome, where he, Hector, is a slave to a "foolish master" who loses his fortune and is compelled by his creditors to kill himself, and he orders Hector to join him. Hector longs to be free to find the children and wife he had before he became a slave, but he has fallen in love with another slave and forgets his waiting family.

In the third incarnation, Hector is a Scottish crusader on his way home to his children. The soul of his master from his life in Rome is now a crusader trying to decide whether to become a priest. They travel together until Hector finds his soul mate from the life in Rome. She is a widow and wishes for Hector to join her family, but his duties to his children in Scotland pull at him.

In the fourth incarnation, Hector is finally forced to confront his capacity for cowardly indecision. He is a Portuguese man in the Renaissance shipwrecked on the coast of Africa. He is the master in this life, his wife from the first incarnation shipwrecked with him as his spurned lover, and the raider who spirited her away is her steadfast friend.

In the fifth incarnation, Hector is a modern man in New York, paying the consequences of cowardly indecision, and gaining the strength to address the children who he lost lifetimes ago. He is joined in this life by his master/slave/friend/soul mate, and ex-wife, Janet, and her husband/raider from lifetimes past. They support him, but they are people who are trying to find their own way, as in the past lives.

Production

The film had a very problematic production, mainly due to financial issues and the ambition of Forsyth's screenplay. After poor test screenings, Warner Bros. instructed Bill Forsyth to trim 40 minutes from the film, as well as add narration and a happy ending. Forsyth subsequently disowned the film.[2] [3]

Reception

Critical reception

Despite the changes, the film was still not well received on release. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a 54% rating, based on 13 reviews.[4]

Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly gave the film an "F", and said that the film "demonstrates what can happen when a director with a gossamer comic touch tries to become commercial - the movie is so flat and banal it's like a Mel Brooks parody in which someone forgot to put in the jokes".[5]

Janet Maslin of The New York Times was more positive, declaring, "Aiming high and falling short of his own mark, Mr. Forsyth remains a film maker of vivid, unpredictable imagination."[6]

Box office

The film was one of the worst-performing films of the year, grossing just $5 million against its $40 million cost.[1] It grossed $1.5 million in the United States and Canada.

Year-end worst-of lists

See also

Notes and References

  1. Variety. February 13, 1995. 7. World's Champs & Chumps.
  2. Web site: Being Human (1994). IMDb. 6 May 1994.
  3. Web site: Bill Forsyth. Christopher Meir. Senses of Cinema.
  4. Web site: Being Human . 6 May 1994 . .
  5. Being Human . . 8 May 2014 . 12 May 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140512220158/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20187191,00.html . live .
  6. "Annals of Everybody, by Bill Forsyth" by Janet Maslin, The New York Times, 6 May 1994
  7. News: Lovell. Glenn. December 25, 1994 . The Past Picture Show the Good, the Bad and the Ugly -- a Year Worth's of Movie Memories. San Jose Mercury News. 3. Morning Final.
  8. Web site: Hunter. Stephen. December 25, 1994. Films worthy of the title 'best' in short supply MOVIES. The Baltimore Sun. July 19, 2020.
  9. Web site: BEST AND WORST: 1986-1995 . tvplex.com . 12 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/19961128233828/http://tvplex.com/BuenaVista/SiskelAndEbert/Text/BestAndWorstG.html . 28 November 1996 . dead .
  10. News: Ross. Bob. December 30, 1994. Versed in the worst. The Tampa Tribune. 18. Final.