Bernie
Jack Black Actor , Shirley MacLaine Actor , Matthew McConaughey Actor , Brady Coleman Actor , Richard Robichaux Actor
MPAA Rating:
PG13
Contains:Violence,Profanity
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Bernie
Theatrical Release Date: 2012 04 27 (USA - Limited)
UPC: 687797135292
Studio: Millennium Entertainment
MPAA Rating: PG13 Contains:[Violence, Profanity]
Summary: Director Richard Linklater teams with writer Skip Hollandsworth for this darkly comic docudrama detailing the unusual friendship between a likable Texas mortician and a wealthy but reviled widow, and the shocking crime that followed. Inspired by Hollandsworth's 1998 Texas Monthly article that first caught the attention of Linklater, Bernie takes place in Carthage, TX, where effeminate mortician Bernie Tiede (Jack Black) enjoys a reputation as a friendly and upstanding member of the community. Marjorie Nugent (Shirley MacLaine), on the other hand, couldn't hold a lower position on the local social scale. Repressed and bitter, nasty Marjorie has isolated herself from her neighbors, and as a result has been essentially shunned in her small town. The moment Bernie shows Marjorie a shred of kindness, she clings to him tightly and refuses to let go. Meanwhile, as Marjorie becomes Bernie's sugar mama and the pair becomes inseparable, the local rumor mill begins to churn. Eventually, her intense jealousy becomes too much for Bernie to take. When the caustic widow's body is discovered stuffed in her own freezer, local District Attorney Buck Davidson (Matthew McConaughey) vows that justice will be served, but he finds it difficult to build a convincing case against Bernie as the locals rally to his defense. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Category: Comedy
Awards: Film Presented – Los Angeles Film Festival Film Presented – London Film Festival Film Presented – SXSW Best Male Lead – Independent Spirit Awards Best Feature – Independent Spirit Awards Best Supporting Actor – New York Film Critics Circle Best Independent Film – National Board of Review Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or – Hollywood Foreign Press Association
Features:
Featurettes: amazing grace, true story to film, the gossips
Deleted scenes
Previews
Bernie
Format: DVD
Release Date: 08/21/2012
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Theatre Wide-Screen
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1
Runtime: 99 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English
Subtitles: Spanish,English
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- Bernie
1. Opening Titles [8:40]
2. Sanctuary [7:19]
3. Funeral [8:27]
4. Financial Counseling [8:00]
5. Was Bernie Gay? [7:43]
6. Two Years Later [7:21]
7. What Happened to Carl? [7:49]
8. Carthage Awards [15:03]
9. Self Defense [6:56]
10. Guilty or Innocent? [12:52]
11. Miss My Freedom [2:50]
12. End Credits [6:26]
Perry Seibert
Surprises are memorable, whether they are happy ones or not. Richard Linklater's Bernie presents a story of murder so straightforward that there are no surprises whatsoever, but he does confound our expectations when it comes to the actors. Bernie Tiede (Jack Black) is an effeminate assistant funeral director who is beloved in the small town of Carthage, Texas. He is a magnanimous man, forever buying people gifts even though he has almost no money himself, singing in the local church choir, and providing great comfort and emotional stability to the many elderly widows he meets during the course of his job. One day the wealthy and feared Marjorie Nugent (Shirley MacLaine) needs his services, and soon the mean old bat turns Bernie into her personal valet. While her neediness begins to impinge on his own life, he's too nice to rebel; besides, he doesn't want to pass up all the monetary advantages of being Marjorie's only friend. But eventually he does something drastic in order to get out from under this woman's thumb, which leads tenacious, camera-loving District Attorney Danny Buck (Matthew McConaughey) to dig up the truth regarding Bernie's crime. The whole movie rests primarily on the shoulders of Black, whom Linklater turned into a bankable star with School of Rock -- a film that utilized Black's verbally nimble, high-energy likability in ways no other picture quite has. This time, however, Black tries something new. He gives Bernie a high Texas twang that manages to be soothingly gentle while also betraying an abundance of repressed feelings. The character of Bernie fits Black perfectly, allowing him to bring shades of darkness and sadness we haven't seen from him before to his trademark emphatic extroversion. It's the kind of work that announces he's ready and able to handle much more challenging fare than most of us have come to expect from him. It's a superb performance, but it's far from the only one. McConaughey, another actor whom Linklater traditionally gets the best from, shines by curdling his own abundant charm into an unctuous, self-satisfied ambition -- which makes it even more dramatic that his character is the moral center of the story. In addition to his fine work, MacLaine makes an impression with very little screen time. Marjorie is purposefully detestable from the get-go; her Scrooge-like mentality is highlighted at every opportunity, most humorously when she clutches her purse as a local religious figure tells a group of women he's looking for donations. MacLaine plays that moment so beautifully that you can tell the character's distrust and fear are innate, possibly even subconscious. Sadly, though the actors are uniformly excellent, the screenplay by Linklater and Skip Hollandsworth (who wrote the magazine article about the real-life case the movie is based on), doesn't build any suspense. We learn early on what Bernie does, and while that allows Linklater to focus on the nuances his actors bring to their characters, such a decision deadens the dramatic impact of the storytelling. The actors are so good we understand the characters pretty much from the first frame, and that makes the fact that we know how it turns out much more problematic. After the first 30 minutes, there is no sense of discovery -- we're just waiting for the inevitable confrontation between Bernie and Buck to see how the actors play it. Linklater avoids any accusation of exploiting a real murder -- the picture's ambitions are far too small to think that he intended this to be a blockbuster. It has the intimacy and professional quality of a fine made-for-HBO movie, which shouldn't be taken as an insult. It's absolutely worth seeing for Black's skillful work, but if only the filmmaker had added some tension, more people would be interested in seeing such a genuinely great performance. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Jack Gilardi, Jr.
Executive Producer
Liz Glotzer
Producer
Richard Linklater
Director
Richard Linklater
Producer
Richard Linklater
Screenwriter
Martin Shafer
Producer
Matt Williams
Producer
Ginger Sledge
Producer
David McFadzean
Producer
Judd Payne
Producer
Duncan Montgomery
Executive Producer
Celine Rattray
Producer
Darby Parker
Executive Producer
Graham Reynolds
Composer (Music Score)
Dete Meserve
Producer
Michael Bassick
Executive Producer
Johnny Lin
Executive Producer
William T. Conway
Executive Producer
Don Fox
Executive Producer
Skip Hollandsworth
Screenwriter
Jack Selby
Executive Producer
Ken Hirsh
Executive Producer
Jack Black
Actor
Shirley MacLaine
Actor
Matthew McConaughey
Actor
Brady Coleman
Actor
Richard Robichaux
Actor
Rick Dial
Actor
Brandon Smith
Actor
Larry Jack Dotson
Actor
Merrille McCommas
Actor
Mathew Greer
Actor
Richard Jones
Actor
Charles Bailey
Actor
Suzi McLaughlin
Actor
Grant James
Actor
Julie Erickson
Actor
J.D. Young
Actor
Charlie Stewart
Actor
Joe Stevens
Actor
Raquel Gavia
Actor
Amparo Garcia-Crow
Actor
Toby Metcalf
Actor
Doug Moreland
Actor
Edward Ji
Actor
Jill Blackwood
Actor
David Blackwell
Actor
Gabriel Luna
Actor
Deana Newcomb
Actor
David Steakley
Actor
Peter Harrell Jr.
Actor
Joe Reynolds
Actor
Christian Stokes
Actor
John Hornbuckle
Actor
Wray Crawford
Actor
Margaret Ann Hoard
Actor
Charles Allen Eskew
Actor
Quita Culpepper
Actor
Mona Lee Fultz
Actor
Jerry Biggs
Actor
Robert Works
Actor
Country: USA

