159 out of 234 people found the following comment useful :- A little editing would've been nice., 22 November 2005
Author:
(johnny_betts@hotmail.com) from http://www.themoviemark.com
My reaction to Domino is about as mixed as the mixed race flowchart
that Mo'Nique presents on The Jerry Springer Show during the movie (I
know, that doesn't make much sense unless you've seen the movie). I
dare you to not laugh once she starts introducing terms such as
Blacktino, Chinegro, and Japanic. I suppose if you suck at the teat of
political correctness then you might not get the joke, but otherwise
it's one of the funnier scenes in the movie (the running 90210 joke
being the funniest). At this point you're probably wondering what in
the world Mo'Nique, Jerry Springer, mixed flow charts, and 90210 have
to do with a movie about bounty hunters. It's a legit question. All I
can say is welcome to the unconventionalism that is Domino.
I didn't mind the fact that this isn't very conventional, but at times
it does feel a little convoluted. By the end of the movie I was pretty
clear regarding what was going on, unlike the 'tard in front of me who
couldn't decipher the concept of flashbacks, but the script does feel
unnecessarily complex. Yeah, the movie kept my interest and is fairly
entertaining, but it was just begging for tighter editing. Trimming
about 20 minutes would've made the story stronger and the narrative
more fluent. My guess is that Scott was experimenting and just couldn't
bear to get rid of anything (Tom Waits' cameo especially felt
unnecessary).
Tony Scott's made a movie that appears to be something he and his
friends could most enjoy while under the influence of substances of a
dubious nature. I can deal with the frantic pacing, the quick camera
cuts, and the strange coloring, but is it really necessary to show
characters saying the same line multiple times from different angles?
Sometimes it's all just a little too weird for the sake of being weird.
One of my biggest complaints is that we mainly know that Domino is a
bounty hunter because she tells us about 24 times in her narration,
which starts to grate on the nerves after a while. I would've preferred
to see a little more focus on, you know, her actual bounty hunting.
SHOW us why she was a really good bounty hunter; don't just tell us
over and over. I was expecting some really cool scenes with Mickey
Rourke and Keira hunting down their bounty, showcasing the technical
side of the hunt, and wrapping it all up with cool, tough-guy (and
girl) bounty hunter stuff. Maybe a little sniping here, a vicious beat
down there. Sadly, it never came.
Do I remind everybody that I'm a reviewer by pointing out in every
single review that, "I'm Johnny Betts. I'm a movie reviewer"? No, I do
my job and show you what it is that makes me a movie reviewer!
"By writing crappy reviews, Johnny?"
Uh, well, I guess we all get mixed reactions sometimes.
82 out of 125 people found the following comment useful :- An enjoyable mess, 13 December 2005
Author:
rbverhoef (rbverhoef@hotmail.com) from The Hague, Netherlands
I liked 'Domino' even though the movie felt like a total mess.
Describing the plot would be as much help to you as saying there was a
beginning and an end, so I might as well just do that. I could tell you
that Domino Harvey (Keire Knightley), once a model, has turned into a
bounty hunter under the leadership of Ed Mosbey (Mickey Rourke). Also
part of their team is Choco (Edgar Ramirez), who looks like a Latino
version of Val Kilmer. The movie also involves mafia, stolen money, a
man with an arm detached from his body, Ian Ziering and Brian Austin
Green from 'Beverly Hills 90210' as themselves, sisters named Lashandra
and Lashindra, and a Jerry Springer-sequence that could have been a
comedy short on its own.
I liked all of it for multiple reasons, its energy being one of them.
The movie feels like one long music video, even more than films like
'Trainspotting', 'Go' and 'The Rules of Attraction' (funny how they all
deal with drugs in one way or another), but it never becomes
exhausting. It is one of those films where style over substance
succeeds, maybe not in great way, but simply in a way. I also liked it
for the actors. Keira Knightley is convincing as a tough girl, even
more admirable after just seeing her as a naughty but delicate girl in
'Pride & Prejudice'. Mickey Rourke is back with extraordinary
performance in films such as 'Spun', 'Once Upon a Time in Mexico', 'Sin
City', and now 'Domino'. Not only them, but also Ramirez, Delroy Lindo,
Tom Waits and especially Christopher Walken (as the producer of a
reality show the team is doing) give the movie something extra to
enjoy. It is exactly what this movie is, enjoyable.
60 out of 83 people found the following comment useful :- You'll love it or hate it it's a stylistic thing, 28 June 2006
Author:
Flagrant-Baronessa from the kingdom of far, far away (Sweden)
My name is Domino Harvery. {EDIT *dizzying* CHOP} My--my--my name is
Domino Harvey. {CUT, CHOP} My name is Domino Harvey. {EDIT. CUT.
Playback}
Never have I seen a director take so much flack for his style before.
By now it is evident that most people do not appreciate Tony Scott's
choppy, flashy, dizzying editing technique. If I have to choose between
loving it and hating it, I'd say I love it. It was borderline
distracting at times, but the end result was pretty good and it's nice
to see a director with a creative edge to his style and some
originality (even if it borrows heavily from MTV videos).
This stylistic edge manifests itself as Keira Knightley plays the role
of cocky badass bounty hunter Domino Harvey and even her dialogue seems
strangely choppy. Otherwise she plays her poorly because I pretty much
hated her character and did not sympathize one bit with her, no matter
how much she suffered. We follow Domino through her life as she joins
up with fellow bounty hunters Mickey Rourke, Rizwan Abbasi and Edgar
Ramirez. The crew become tangled up in the FBI and suddenly has a
reality show contract under Christopher Walken's TV production company
(what is Christopher Walken doing in every film, by the way?). I guess
that is a clever film technique, because now Tony Scott is free to use
as much flashy MTV/Reality Show editing footage as he likes. It becomes
a pastiche of MTV culture at this point.
It followes then that the story is told at an amazingly rapid-fire
pace, with lots of raunchy strong language and gun violence. There are
some funny jokes; it's all very modern and surreal at the same time.
It's a mess, but it's a rather enjoyable mess. It is ultimately flawed
in so many ways (the actors try too hard to make their characters
"cool", for one) but it works. I give it a weak 7/10 which may seem
generous when compared to the general consensus of movie-goers who
graded this film but I feel it had some good ideas and executed them
well.
7 out of 10
65 out of 95 people found the following comment useful :- Still a turd no matter how hard you polish it, 1 December 2005
Author:
fertilecelluloid from Mountains of Madness
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Tony Scott destroys anything that may have been interesting in Richard
Kelly's clichéd, patchy, overwrought screenplay. Domino Harvey (Kiera
Knightley) was a model who dropped out and became a bounty hunter. This
is her story... "sort of".
The problem with this rubbish is that there isn't much of a story at
all and Scott's extreme graphic stylization of every shot acts as a
distancing mechanism that makes us indifferent to everything in
Harvey's chaotic life.
You just don't care about Harvey. Knightley plays her as an obnoxious,
cynical brat who has done nothing to warrant our respect. She punches
people she doesn't like and sheds her clothes and inhibitions when the
situation calls for it, but she isn't the least bit real and Knightly
isn't the least bit convincing, either.
The film is boring. It's loud, too, and shackled with one of the most
annoying source music scores I've heard in a long time. The final
twenty minutes are a poor re-run of Scott's "True Romance" climax with
Domino's gang going to meet two sets of feuding bad guys who are --
surprise! surprise! -- destined to shoot it out with each other at the
top of a Las Vegas casino.
Unfortunately, this potentially exciting conflagration is totally
botched by Scott and becomes a confusing, pretentious, pointless
exercise in celluloid masturbation. This is not an artistically brave
or experimental piece; it is a failure on every level because it gives
us no entry point to the lives and dilemmas of its characters.
Mickey Roarke looks good as a grizzled bounty hunter, but he disappears
into the background as the "narrative" progresses. Chris Walken turns
in another embarrassing cameo and Dabney Coleman, always solid, is
underutilized.
Don't be fooled by this film's multi-layered, gimmick-ridden surface.
It is still a turd no matter how hard you polish it.
157 out of 287 people found the following comment useful :- Tony Scott's Postmodern Masterpiece, 16 October 2005
Author:
dlahiff from United States
" Domino " has been widely condemned on this site for its frenetic
editing style and " sickening " photography. It's detractors cite its
superficiality and criticize its deployment of " style over substance"
I couldn't disagree more. I believe that " Domino " represents the
absolute height of Tony Scott's film-making career.
After having created the dominant Hollywood action movie style
throughout the late eighties and early nineties Tony Scott has moved
progressively closer to a more subjective style of cinema. As early as
"Crimson Tide" Scott used his stylistic talent to portray the inner
worlds of his characters- the claustrophobia and drama inherent in the
conflict on board a nuclear submarine was embodied in the excellent use
of long lenses combined with dutched-angle framing. This was then
carried through to " Enemy Of The State" and "Spy Game" which visually
represented the worlds of surveillance and espionage respectively.
" Man On Fire" was an extreme departure , a move into an expressionist
more painterly aesthetic. Here Scott used an antiquated hand cranked
camera and flash frames to express his character's explosive rage .
Although not entirely successful it introduced the techniques which
were to find their full expression in " Domino"
Couched in the framing device of an FBI interrogation " Domino"
presents the life of the infamous bounty hunter via her narrated
disjointed fragments of memory. She grasps at memories as we all do- in
fragments, flashes and brief snatches. As Domino relays her story
verbally Scott relays it visually illustrating not only the events
which she describes but also the point of view which guides them. She
does have " traces of mescaline" in her system but her individual
vision is anyway Unusual -that of an woman who eschewed the life of
luxury for bounty hunting.
It is when Domino begins to relate the events which lead to her
captivity that Scott really lets rip. Together with Cinematographer Dan
Mindel and composer Harry-Gregson Williams Scott orchestrates a
postmodern canvas of contemporary Americana. Gradually we begin to
realize that unusual though she may be Domino is no more disjointed
than the "90210" culture she has rejected. As she wades through this
cultural melange Scott makes his viewer more aware of the innocence
which it destroys through the underprivileged children which the
narrative introduces. Ultimately Scott portrays their salvation as the
only escape we have from this surreal trip.
To criticize this movie for being overly stylized is akin to
criticizing a Picasso or a Pollock for not representing that which is
recognizably human. Like any great painting the meaning in " Domino" is
in the surface and the surface is everything.
I am not in any way associated with Scott Free but have always been and
will continue to be a huge admirer of Tony Scott's work
30 out of 44 people found the following comment useful :- I wasted my time on this one., 16 March 2006
Author:
dedla from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Repetitive music, annoying narration, terrible cinematography effects.
Half of the plot seemed centered around shock value and the other half
seemed to be focused on appeasing the type of crowd that would nag at
people to start a fight.
One of the best scenes was in the "deleted scenes" section, the one
where she's in the principle's office with her mom. I don't understand
why they'd cut that. The movie seemed desperate to make a point about
anything it could and Domino talking about sororities would have been a
highlight of the movie.
Ridiculous camera work is reminiscent of MTV, and completely not needed
or helpful to a movie. Speeding the film up just to jump past a lot of
things and rotating the camera around something repeatedly got old the
first time it was used. It's like the directors are wanting to use up
all this extra footage they didn't want to throw away.
Another movie with Jerry Springer in it? That should've told me not to
watch it from the preview.
A popular movie for the "in" crowd.
30 out of 45 people found the following comment useful :- Awful, 5 January 2006
Author:
SteveLKay from Bonn, Germany
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
From the first moment, this "thing" is just an awful sequence of
extremely short cuts of blurry camera work. While the overall plot has
every potential for a thriller, the story is so badly told that I'm
unable to buy it. From the middle of the film, the actions of
characters don't make sense to me. Stop reading now to avoid SPOILERS.
For instance, Ed's idea to have Edna make coffee for them after having
shot off her son's arm is way below his alleged experience; it's just
an extremely stupid idea. Domino not questioning the fragmentary orders
she receives from Claremont Williams over a breaking-up phone
connection just eludes me; shouldn't she be long suspicious that
Williams is turning them in? Those FBI agents seem out of their minds
showing up with just one single helicopter to something they have every
reason to consider a capital mafia shoot-out. Besides, what they do by
withholding and leaking information towards Cigliutti is pretty much
incitement to murder; it seems to me like farewell to justice if that's
they way the FBI does investigations. In reality, they'd have a case
messed up beyond repair if they acted like this. We get to see a car
accident which normally would have at least seriously injured if not
killed most of the passengers but miraculously leaves all of them with
just a few bruises. Quite the contrary, the accident is immediately
followed by Domino making love to Choco, which is from Domino's
viewpoint in no way founded by previous events but just by being
drugged to the eyeballs.
The whole sequence of scenes starting from the phone call of Claremont
Williams appears to me just as want-to-be dramatic razzle-dazzle. This
combined with the awful, uneasy camera work just makes a piece I
hesitate to call a movie. I'm sorry for the wasted effort of the main
actors, whose talent is out of question.
17 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :- A veritable mess, 25 August 2006
Author:
darbo_pirmunas from Vilnius, Lithuania
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
My flatmate rented out this film the other night, so we watched it
together.
The first impression is actually a positive one, because the whole
movie is shot in this colorful, grainy, post-MTV texture. Fast
sequences, cool angles, sweeping camera moves - for the moment there
you feel like you about to watch another "Snatch", for the moment....
When the plot actually starts unfolding, one starts to feel as if one
over-dosed amphetamine. things just don't make sense anymore. i would
hate to spoil the fun of watching it by giving out certain scenes, but
then again, the film is so bad that you are actually better off NOT
watching it.
First you think it is a crime story recounted in a conversation between
Keira Knightley and Lucy Liu. WRONG. This conversation provides no
coherent narrative whatsoever. Rather on the contrary, Domino's lesbian
come on on Lucy Liu's character during the second part of the movie
just throws the audience into further confusion.
Then i thought that maybe it is a movie about a girl from affluent but
dysfunctional background who grew to be a tough bounty hunter. In any
case, that is the message conveyed by the opening scenes. But after
that the question of Domino's character is entirely lost to the
criminal plot. So in short, NO this is NOT a movie about Domino's
character.
Then i thought, it's probably a story of one robbery. A pretty bloody
robbery. 10 millions went missing, bounty hunters are chasing around
suspected robbers, mafia kids are executed, hands are removed, Domino
tries to crack why this time they get no bounty certificates, etc. But
soon this impression is dispelled by another U-turn of the plot.
This time we are confronted with a sad story of an obese Afro-American
woman, who fakes driver's licenses at the local MVD and at the age of
28 happens to be a youngest grandmother. Lateesha stars on Jerry
Springer show, tries to publicize some new, wacky racial theory, and at
the same time struggles to find money for her sick granddaughter.
What does this have to do with the main plot? URgh, well, nobody knows.
Except that director had to explain the audiences where will bounty
hunters put their collectors' fee of 300,000.
Then at some point you start to think: "Oh, it is about our society and
the way media distorts things". There is reality TV crew driving around
with the bounty hunters and doing some violent footage. The bounty
hunters are also stuck with a bunch of Hollywood actors, who just whine
all the time about having their noses broken and themselves dragged
around too many crime scenes. But NO, this is not a movie about media,
they just appear sporadically throughout the movie.
Plus there are numerous other sub-plots: the crazy Afghani guy bent on
liberating Afghanistan, the love story between Domino and Chocco, the
mescaline episode, the FBI surveillance operation...
Can all of the things mentioned above be packed into 2 hrs movie? Judge
for yourself, but my conclusion is clear - it is a veritable mess!
38 out of 66 people found the following comment useful :- A fun escape, 17 October 2005
Author:
from United States
If you find yourself in need of an escape, something that will hold
your attention for two hours and allow you to be lost in another world,
Domino will satisfy that need. This is entertainment, after all! The
plot keeps your brain in motion - one of those movies (like Usual
Suspects) where you want to see it a second time to figure it all out.
I wondered about Domino Harvey herself, how her life became of interest
to Hollywood. As for the acting, lots of celebrity appearances not
shown in the trailers. And any actor that makes me forget who they are
has done their job well. Not once did I think of Kiera in a soccer
uniform or pirate costume. And granted, Mickey Rourke plays Mickey
Rourke well and often, but here, despite the violence, he shows signs
of being capable of caring for other people.
26 out of 43 people found the following comment useful :- Domino Sux, 4 March 2006
Author:
johnnybgood6 from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
If it smells like garbage and if it looks like garbage, it must be
garbage. This is by far one of the worst movies I have ever seen in my
entire life. Tony Scott's poor directing style puts shame to an already
uninteresting and slightly untrue story of Domino Harvey's life as a
bounty hunter. The story is completely discontinuous and confusing to
watch. Certain aspects of the plot were ridiculous and totally
unbelievable. It seems that all of the action scenes were loosely
strung together by poor plot points and horrible acting. Keira
Knightley does get totally naked in this one though. That is the one
and only upside to this film. If you want to see her naked just fast
forward the movie until about an hour and a half into it and you'll
catch a whole lot of nipple. I strongly suggest that no one see this
movie EVER!</3
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Domino (2005)
159 out of 234 people found the following comment useful :-

A little editing would've been nice., 22 November 2005
Author: (johnny_betts@hotmail.com) from http://www.themoviemark.com
My reaction to Domino is about as mixed as the mixed race flowchart that Mo'Nique presents on The Jerry Springer Show during the movie (I know, that doesn't make much sense unless you've seen the movie). I dare you to not laugh once she starts introducing terms such as Blacktino, Chinegro, and Japanic. I suppose if you suck at the teat of political correctness then you might not get the joke, but otherwise it's one of the funnier scenes in the movie (the running 90210 joke being the funniest). At this point you're probably wondering what in the world Mo'Nique, Jerry Springer, mixed flow charts, and 90210 have to do with a movie about bounty hunters. It's a legit question. All I can say is welcome to the unconventionalism that is Domino.
I didn't mind the fact that this isn't very conventional, but at times it does feel a little convoluted. By the end of the movie I was pretty clear regarding what was going on, unlike the 'tard in front of me who couldn't decipher the concept of flashbacks, but the script does feel unnecessarily complex. Yeah, the movie kept my interest and is fairly entertaining, but it was just begging for tighter editing. Trimming about 20 minutes would've made the story stronger and the narrative more fluent. My guess is that Scott was experimenting and just couldn't bear to get rid of anything (Tom Waits' cameo especially felt unnecessary).
Tony Scott's made a movie that appears to be something he and his friends could most enjoy while under the influence of substances of a dubious nature. I can deal with the frantic pacing, the quick camera cuts, and the strange coloring, but is it really necessary to show characters saying the same line multiple times from different angles? Sometimes it's all just a little too weird for the sake of being weird.
One of my biggest complaints is that we mainly know that Domino is a bounty hunter because she tells us about 24 times in her narration, which starts to grate on the nerves after a while. I would've preferred to see a little more focus on, you know, her actual bounty hunting. SHOW us why she was a really good bounty hunter; don't just tell us over and over. I was expecting some really cool scenes with Mickey Rourke and Keira hunting down their bounty, showcasing the technical side of the hunt, and wrapping it all up with cool, tough-guy (and girl) bounty hunter stuff. Maybe a little sniping here, a vicious beat down there. Sadly, it never came.
Do I remind everybody that I'm a reviewer by pointing out in every single review that, "I'm Johnny Betts. I'm a movie reviewer"? No, I do my job and show you what it is that makes me a movie reviewer!
"By writing crappy reviews, Johnny?"
Uh, well, I guess we all get mixed reactions sometimes.
82 out of 125 people found the following comment useful :-

An enjoyable mess, 13 December 2005
Author: rbverhoef (rbverhoef@hotmail.com) from The Hague, Netherlands
I liked 'Domino' even though the movie felt like a total mess. Describing the plot would be as much help to you as saying there was a beginning and an end, so I might as well just do that. I could tell you that Domino Harvey (Keire Knightley), once a model, has turned into a bounty hunter under the leadership of Ed Mosbey (Mickey Rourke). Also part of their team is Choco (Edgar Ramirez), who looks like a Latino version of Val Kilmer. The movie also involves mafia, stolen money, a man with an arm detached from his body, Ian Ziering and Brian Austin Green from 'Beverly Hills 90210' as themselves, sisters named Lashandra and Lashindra, and a Jerry Springer-sequence that could have been a comedy short on its own.
I liked all of it for multiple reasons, its energy being one of them. The movie feels like one long music video, even more than films like 'Trainspotting', 'Go' and 'The Rules of Attraction' (funny how they all deal with drugs in one way or another), but it never becomes exhausting. It is one of those films where style over substance succeeds, maybe not in great way, but simply in a way. I also liked it for the actors. Keira Knightley is convincing as a tough girl, even more admirable after just seeing her as a naughty but delicate girl in 'Pride & Prejudice'. Mickey Rourke is back with extraordinary performance in films such as 'Spun', 'Once Upon a Time in Mexico', 'Sin City', and now 'Domino'. Not only them, but also Ramirez, Delroy Lindo, Tom Waits and especially Christopher Walken (as the producer of a reality show the team is doing) give the movie something extra to enjoy. It is exactly what this movie is, enjoyable.
60 out of 83 people found the following comment useful :-

You'll love it or hate it it's a stylistic thing, 28 June 2006
Author: Flagrant-Baronessa from the kingdom of far, far away (Sweden)
My name is Domino Harvery. {EDIT *dizzying* CHOP} My--my--my name is Domino Harvey. {CUT, CHOP} My name is Domino Harvey. {EDIT. CUT. Playback}
Never have I seen a director take so much flack for his style before. By now it is evident that most people do not appreciate Tony Scott's choppy, flashy, dizzying editing technique. If I have to choose between loving it and hating it, I'd say I love it. It was borderline distracting at times, but the end result was pretty good and it's nice to see a director with a creative edge to his style and some originality (even if it borrows heavily from MTV videos).
This stylistic edge manifests itself as Keira Knightley plays the role of cocky badass bounty hunter Domino Harvey and even her dialogue seems strangely choppy. Otherwise she plays her poorly because I pretty much hated her character and did not sympathize one bit with her, no matter how much she suffered. We follow Domino through her life as she joins up with fellow bounty hunters Mickey Rourke, Rizwan Abbasi and Edgar Ramirez. The crew become tangled up in the FBI and suddenly has a reality show contract under Christopher Walken's TV production company (what is Christopher Walken doing in every film, by the way?). I guess that is a clever film technique, because now Tony Scott is free to use as much flashy MTV/Reality Show editing footage as he likes. It becomes a pastiche of MTV culture at this point.
It followes then that the story is told at an amazingly rapid-fire pace, with lots of raunchy strong language and gun violence. There are some funny jokes; it's all very modern and surreal at the same time. It's a mess, but it's a rather enjoyable mess. It is ultimately flawed in so many ways (the actors try too hard to make their characters "cool", for one) but it works. I give it a weak 7/10 which may seem generous when compared to the general consensus of movie-goers who graded this film but I feel it had some good ideas and executed them well.
7 out of 10
65 out of 95 people found the following comment useful :-

Still a turd no matter how hard you polish it, 1 December 2005
Author: fertilecelluloid from Mountains of Madness
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Tony Scott destroys anything that may have been interesting in Richard Kelly's clichéd, patchy, overwrought screenplay. Domino Harvey (Kiera Knightley) was a model who dropped out and became a bounty hunter. This is her story... "sort of".
The problem with this rubbish is that there isn't much of a story at all and Scott's extreme graphic stylization of every shot acts as a distancing mechanism that makes us indifferent to everything in Harvey's chaotic life.
You just don't care about Harvey. Knightley plays her as an obnoxious, cynical brat who has done nothing to warrant our respect. She punches people she doesn't like and sheds her clothes and inhibitions when the situation calls for it, but she isn't the least bit real and Knightly isn't the least bit convincing, either.
The film is boring. It's loud, too, and shackled with one of the most annoying source music scores I've heard in a long time. The final twenty minutes are a poor re-run of Scott's "True Romance" climax with Domino's gang going to meet two sets of feuding bad guys who are -- surprise! surprise! -- destined to shoot it out with each other at the top of a Las Vegas casino.
Unfortunately, this potentially exciting conflagration is totally botched by Scott and becomes a confusing, pretentious, pointless exercise in celluloid masturbation. This is not an artistically brave or experimental piece; it is a failure on every level because it gives us no entry point to the lives and dilemmas of its characters.
Mickey Roarke looks good as a grizzled bounty hunter, but he disappears into the background as the "narrative" progresses. Chris Walken turns in another embarrassing cameo and Dabney Coleman, always solid, is underutilized.
Don't be fooled by this film's multi-layered, gimmick-ridden surface. It is still a turd no matter how hard you polish it.
157 out of 287 people found the following comment useful :-

Tony Scott's Postmodern Masterpiece, 16 October 2005
Author: dlahiff from United States
" Domino " has been widely condemned on this site for its frenetic editing style and " sickening " photography. It's detractors cite its superficiality and criticize its deployment of " style over substance" I couldn't disagree more. I believe that " Domino " represents the absolute height of Tony Scott's film-making career.
After having created the dominant Hollywood action movie style throughout the late eighties and early nineties Tony Scott has moved progressively closer to a more subjective style of cinema. As early as "Crimson Tide" Scott used his stylistic talent to portray the inner worlds of his characters- the claustrophobia and drama inherent in the conflict on board a nuclear submarine was embodied in the excellent use of long lenses combined with dutched-angle framing. This was then carried through to " Enemy Of The State" and "Spy Game" which visually represented the worlds of surveillance and espionage respectively.
" Man On Fire" was an extreme departure , a move into an expressionist more painterly aesthetic. Here Scott used an antiquated hand cranked camera and flash frames to express his character's explosive rage . Although not entirely successful it introduced the techniques which were to find their full expression in " Domino"
Couched in the framing device of an FBI interrogation " Domino" presents the life of the infamous bounty hunter via her narrated disjointed fragments of memory. She grasps at memories as we all do- in fragments, flashes and brief snatches. As Domino relays her story verbally Scott relays it visually illustrating not only the events which she describes but also the point of view which guides them. She does have " traces of mescaline" in her system but her individual vision is anyway Unusual -that of an woman who eschewed the life of luxury for bounty hunting.
It is when Domino begins to relate the events which lead to her captivity that Scott really lets rip. Together with Cinematographer Dan Mindel and composer Harry-Gregson Williams Scott orchestrates a postmodern canvas of contemporary Americana. Gradually we begin to realize that unusual though she may be Domino is no more disjointed than the "90210" culture she has rejected. As she wades through this cultural melange Scott makes his viewer more aware of the innocence which it destroys through the underprivileged children which the narrative introduces. Ultimately Scott portrays their salvation as the only escape we have from this surreal trip.
To criticize this movie for being overly stylized is akin to criticizing a Picasso or a Pollock for not representing that which is recognizably human. Like any great painting the meaning in " Domino" is in the surface and the surface is everything.
I am not in any way associated with Scott Free but have always been and will continue to be a huge admirer of Tony Scott's work
30 out of 44 people found the following comment useful :-

I wasted my time on this one., 16 March 2006
Author: dedla from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Repetitive music, annoying narration, terrible cinematography effects. Half of the plot seemed centered around shock value and the other half seemed to be focused on appeasing the type of crowd that would nag at people to start a fight.
One of the best scenes was in the "deleted scenes" section, the one where she's in the principle's office with her mom. I don't understand why they'd cut that. The movie seemed desperate to make a point about anything it could and Domino talking about sororities would have been a highlight of the movie.
Ridiculous camera work is reminiscent of MTV, and completely not needed or helpful to a movie. Speeding the film up just to jump past a lot of things and rotating the camera around something repeatedly got old the first time it was used. It's like the directors are wanting to use up all this extra footage they didn't want to throw away.
Another movie with Jerry Springer in it? That should've told me not to watch it from the preview.
A popular movie for the "in" crowd.
30 out of 45 people found the following comment useful :-

Awful, 5 January 2006
Author: SteveLKay from Bonn, Germany
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
From the first moment, this "thing" is just an awful sequence of extremely short cuts of blurry camera work. While the overall plot has every potential for a thriller, the story is so badly told that I'm unable to buy it. From the middle of the film, the actions of characters don't make sense to me. Stop reading now to avoid SPOILERS.
For instance, Ed's idea to have Edna make coffee for them after having shot off her son's arm is way below his alleged experience; it's just an extremely stupid idea. Domino not questioning the fragmentary orders she receives from Claremont Williams over a breaking-up phone connection just eludes me; shouldn't she be long suspicious that Williams is turning them in? Those FBI agents seem out of their minds showing up with just one single helicopter to something they have every reason to consider a capital mafia shoot-out. Besides, what they do by withholding and leaking information towards Cigliutti is pretty much incitement to murder; it seems to me like farewell to justice if that's they way the FBI does investigations. In reality, they'd have a case messed up beyond repair if they acted like this. We get to see a car accident which normally would have at least seriously injured if not killed most of the passengers but miraculously leaves all of them with just a few bruises. Quite the contrary, the accident is immediately followed by Domino making love to Choco, which is from Domino's viewpoint in no way founded by previous events but just by being drugged to the eyeballs.
The whole sequence of scenes starting from the phone call of Claremont Williams appears to me just as want-to-be dramatic razzle-dazzle. This combined with the awful, uneasy camera work just makes a piece I hesitate to call a movie. I'm sorry for the wasted effort of the main actors, whose talent is out of question.
17 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :-

A veritable mess, 25 August 2006
Author: darbo_pirmunas from Vilnius, Lithuania
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
My flatmate rented out this film the other night, so we watched it together.
The first impression is actually a positive one, because the whole movie is shot in this colorful, grainy, post-MTV texture. Fast sequences, cool angles, sweeping camera moves - for the moment there you feel like you about to watch another "Snatch", for the moment....
When the plot actually starts unfolding, one starts to feel as if one over-dosed amphetamine. things just don't make sense anymore. i would hate to spoil the fun of watching it by giving out certain scenes, but then again, the film is so bad that you are actually better off NOT watching it.
First you think it is a crime story recounted in a conversation between Keira Knightley and Lucy Liu. WRONG. This conversation provides no coherent narrative whatsoever. Rather on the contrary, Domino's lesbian come on on Lucy Liu's character during the second part of the movie just throws the audience into further confusion.
Then i thought that maybe it is a movie about a girl from affluent but dysfunctional background who grew to be a tough bounty hunter. In any case, that is the message conveyed by the opening scenes. But after that the question of Domino's character is entirely lost to the criminal plot. So in short, NO this is NOT a movie about Domino's character.
Then i thought, it's probably a story of one robbery. A pretty bloody robbery. 10 millions went missing, bounty hunters are chasing around suspected robbers, mafia kids are executed, hands are removed, Domino tries to crack why this time they get no bounty certificates, etc. But soon this impression is dispelled by another U-turn of the plot.
This time we are confronted with a sad story of an obese Afro-American woman, who fakes driver's licenses at the local MVD and at the age of 28 happens to be a youngest grandmother. Lateesha stars on Jerry Springer show, tries to publicize some new, wacky racial theory, and at the same time struggles to find money for her sick granddaughter.
What does this have to do with the main plot? URgh, well, nobody knows. Except that director had to explain the audiences where will bounty hunters put their collectors' fee of 300,000.
Then at some point you start to think: "Oh, it is about our society and the way media distorts things". There is reality TV crew driving around with the bounty hunters and doing some violent footage. The bounty hunters are also stuck with a bunch of Hollywood actors, who just whine all the time about having their noses broken and themselves dragged around too many crime scenes. But NO, this is not a movie about media, they just appear sporadically throughout the movie.
Plus there are numerous other sub-plots: the crazy Afghani guy bent on liberating Afghanistan, the love story between Domino and Chocco, the mescaline episode, the FBI surveillance operation...
Can all of the things mentioned above be packed into 2 hrs movie? Judge for yourself, but my conclusion is clear - it is a veritable mess!
38 out of 66 people found the following comment useful :-

A fun escape, 17 October 2005
Author: from United States
If you find yourself in need of an escape, something that will hold your attention for two hours and allow you to be lost in another world, Domino will satisfy that need. This is entertainment, after all! The plot keeps your brain in motion - one of those movies (like Usual Suspects) where you want to see it a second time to figure it all out. I wondered about Domino Harvey herself, how her life became of interest to Hollywood. As for the acting, lots of celebrity appearances not shown in the trailers. And any actor that makes me forget who they are has done their job well. Not once did I think of Kiera in a soccer uniform or pirate costume. And granted, Mickey Rourke plays Mickey Rourke well and often, but here, despite the violence, he shows signs of being capable of caring for other people.
26 out of 43 people found the following comment useful :-

Domino Sux, 4 March 2006
Author: johnnybgood6 from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
If it smells like garbage and if it looks like garbage, it must be garbage. This is by far one of the worst movies I have ever seen in my entire life. Tony Scott's poor directing style puts shame to an already uninteresting and slightly untrue story of Domino Harvey's life as a bounty hunter. The story is completely discontinuous and confusing to watch. Certain aspects of the plot were ridiculous and totally unbelievable. It seems that all of the action scenes were loosely strung together by poor plot points and horrible acting. Keira Knightley does get totally naked in this one though. That is the one and only upside to this film. If you want to see her naked just fast forward the movie until about an hour and a half into it and you'll catch a whole lot of nipple. I strongly suggest that no one see this movie EVER!</3
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