There are plenty of interesting and unusual elements in this very strange film, but in the end it seems that whatever special spirit was present in Palahniuk's book has eluded Gregg and his collaborators.
Choke (2008)
Tomatometer
How does the Tomatometer work ![]()
Reviews Counted:135
Fresh:73
Rotten:62
Average Rating:5.6/10
Consensus: While bolstered by strong performances from Sam Rockwell and Anjelica Huston, Choke struggles to capture the tone of Chuck Palahniuk's novel.
Australian Rating: R18+ [See Full Rating] Sex scenes, sexual references and themes
Runtime: 1 hr 32 mins
Genre: Comedies
Australian Theatrical Release:
Oct 30, 2008 Wide
US Box Office: $2,831,900
Synopsis: CHOKE's protagonist, Victor Mancini, shouldn't be a likable character. He's an unrepentant sex addict who has sex with the woman he's supposed to be sponsoring. He purposely chokes in restaurants... CHOKE's protagonist, Victor Mancini, shouldn't be a likable character. He's an unrepentant sex addict who has sex with the woman he's supposed to be sponsoring. He purposely chokes in restaurants so that rich patrons will save him and send him money. And he sometimes wishes that his mother, who suffers from dementia, would just get it over with and die. But because Victor is played--and played quite well--by Sam Rockwell (THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY), it's hard not to have a little sympathy for him. He spends his days working at a colonial tourist attraction with his best friend, Denny (Brad William Henke), incurring the wrath of his authenticity-craving boss (Clark Gregg, who also directed and wrote the film). His evenings are spent visiting his mother (Oscar winner Anjelica Huston) in a private hospital, but she mistakes her son for men in her past and wonders when Victor will visit. But young, pretty Dr. Paige Marshall (NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN's Kelly Macdonald) has a radical idea about treatment that may bring his mother's mind back, and Victor's devotion to his mother--and a desire to sleep with Dr. Marshall--makes him eager to try. CHOKE rivals some soft-core porn with its abundance of sex, nudity, and adult toys, but there's more here than just the shocking and the steamy. This dark comedy is based on a novel by Chuck Palahniuk, most famous for writing the book FIGHT CLUB. Like the adaptation of that novel, CHOKE is a surefire cult favorite that meditates on the themes of culture, religion, fathers, sexuality, and identity. It's a mean, misanthropic film at times, but similar to its protagonist, it's hard not to like. Gregg has made an assured directorial debut, and his script retains the blackly humorous tone of the novel. [More]
Starring: Sam Rockwell, Anjelica Huston, Kelly MacDonald, Brad William Henke
Starring: Sam Rockwell, Anjelica Huston, Kelly MacDonald, Brad William Henke, Jonah Bobo, Clark Gregg
Director: Clark Gregg
Director: Clark Gregg
Screenwriter: Clark Gregg
Producer: Beau Flynn, Tripp Vinson, Johnathan Dorfman, Temple Fennell
Composer: Nathan Larson
Studio: Fox Searchlight Pictures
Reviews for Choke
Slighter and tighter than its blockbuster cousin, shot in the neighbourhood of just five percent of its predecessor's budget.
Gregg, with his first directing job, has risen to the challenge, and adapted Choke without sacrificing anything and resulting in a less conventional film.
Rockwell's performance is so artificial it's as if we're invited to look past all the tics to the real human being who might be lurking beneath.
Although the central performances are solid, Clark Gregg, in his first film as director has taken on a wildly ambitious story to tell, and that's to his credit, but it's more a curiosity of a film than a walk on the wild side.
Sam Rockwell throws himself into this thornbush of a role with a veracity that is curiously intensified by the (real life) damaged finger in his left hand.
More quirky than funny, this perverse satire chomps into a sandwich filled with issues like sex and belonging. Pushing the envelope every which way, this adaptation of Chuck Palhniuk's fourth novel is out to shock, confront and offend, which it does,
Choke is an admirably fearless no-net movie, but rather than wowing the crowd below, it lands in the center of the big top with a resounding thud.
‘Choke’ never manages to be as edgy, amusing, insightful or plain messy as you’d hope it would be, especially considering its ‘naughty’ promotional poster and the distribution of anal beads as a marketing device.
Uneven and oddly compromised in tone, Choke is a competent enough black comedy, but in the shadow of that other film, it never shines.
Choke is a confused sex comedy by Clark Gregg that blunders around for 90-odd minutes trying to look butch and sensitive.
For all its flaws and fumbles there is a certain guilty pleasure in Choke.
This adaptation of a novel by American provocateur Chuck Palahniuk is profane, offensive and obscene, and packed with balefully weak jokes.
Choke was never going to win any prizes for subtlety, but by toning down Palahniuk’s nastier absurdities in favour of obvious laughs, Gregg’s adaptation is no more provocative than the average Carry On film.
But his sterility and romantically curved plot, twisted as it might be, feel respectively reductive and pat next to Palahniuk’s fast, filthy and scabrous satirical stabs.
Latest News for Choke
February 17, 2009:
Talky odyssey about a lewd leading man and glum sex addict in sexaholic rehab when not, well, having sex. Possibly the first on screen designated dirty young man ever. I See Nude People. ![]()
More...
February 15, 2009:
Talky odyssey about a lewd leading man and glum sex addict in sexaholic rehab when not, well, having sex. Possibly the first on screen designated dirty young man ever. I See Nude People. ![]()
More...
October 26, 2008:
BusinessLive: Talky odyssey about a lewd leading man and glum sex addict in sexaholic rehab when not, well, having sex. Possibly the first on screen designated dirty young man ever. I See Nude People. ![]()
More...
September 22, 2008:
Five Favorite Films with Chuck Palahniuk
In honor of his latest novel-cum-film, Choke, opening this week nationwide, bestselling author Chuck Palahniuk (Fight Club) shares his Five Favorite Films with Rotten Tomatoes! More...
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
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