| | | An ordinary high school day. Except that it's not. Features: DVD, Widescreen, English, French, Spanish, Subtitled, Theatrical Version, Trailers Winner of the Palme d'Or and Best Director prizes at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival, Gus Van Sant's (Good Will Hunting, Finding Forrester) realistic drama Elephant takes us inside an American high school on one single, ordinary day that very rapidly turns tragic. The story unfolds with class work, football, gossip and socializing. It observes the comings and goings of its characters from a safe distance, allowing us to see them as they are. With each student we see high school through a different experience, a new lens. These experiences range from friendly and innocent to traumatic and deeply disturbing.
Elephant demonstrates that high school life is a complex landscape where the vitality and beauty of young lives can shift from light to darkness with surreal speed. It's an ordinary high school day. Except that it's not. "Mesmerizing!" Desson Howe, Washington Post "Shocks the status quo!" Elvis Mitchell, New York Times "Stunning" Michael Wilmington, Chicago Tribune
 Editor's Note
 Gus Van Sant's drifty, eloquent, and effortlessly poignant ELEPHANT is loosely based on the massacre at Columbine High School. (On April 20, 1999 in Littleton, Colorado two 17-year-old boys fired semiautomatic weapons on their high school classmates, killing 13, injuring 25, and then taking their own lives.) Van Sant's film is set in Portland, Oregon and uses non-actors chosen from an open casting call of high school students. On a crisp, sunny fall day, with colorful leaves on the trees and puffy clouds drifting across blue skies, students arrive at school as usual. Eli takes photographs for his portfolio, John manages problems with his alcoholic father, Acadia attends a gay-lesbian meeting, Nate plays a game of tag football, and Michelle works in the library. Meanwhile, two outsiders, Eric and Alex, harbor hatred for their peers. Each of ELEPHANT's students have unique interests and personalities, and the film respectfully emphasizes their individuality. It also demonstrates how school is an unpredictable blender where students' differences are constantly agitated. Harris Savides' excellent photography--shot in 1:33 aspect ratio, making the movie a cube in the center of the screen--follows and floats, sometimes blurring and juxtaposing the light to achieve an ethereal mood; while Leslie Shatz's ambient sound design and a soundtrack of soft Beethoven piano music completes that feeling. The film is structured in brief overlapping chapters all taking place the morning of the 11:35 A.M. attack. ELEPHANT won the Palme D'Or and Best Director at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival.
| Features | Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound; English, French Mono |  | HBO Films Spot |  | Interactive Menus |  | On The Set Of Elephant: "Rolling Through Time" |  | Scene Selection |  | Subtitles: English, French, Spanish |  | Theatrical Trailer |  | On The Set Of Elephant: Rolling Through Time |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: HBO |
 | Release Date: 5/26/2009 |
 | Running Time: 81 minutes |
 | Original Release Date: 2003 |  | Catalog ID: 92229 |  | UPC: 00026359222924 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English, French Dubbed |  | Available Subtitles: English, French, Spanish |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Widescreen/Standard 1.85:1/1.33:1 |
| Cast & Crew
| Awards | Cannes Film Festival (2003) |  | Gus Van Sant, Winner, Best Director |  | Gus Van Sant, Winner, Golden Palm |  | Gus Van Sant, Winner, Cinema Prize of the French National Education System |
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| | Professional Reviews | Hollywood Reporter "...Harris Savides' camera and Leslie Shatz's sound design capture the mood and rhythms of campus life..." 05/20/2003 p.14-16Premiere "...Simply astonishing..." 11/01/2003 p.25 Movieline's Hollywood Life "...It is unlike any film you've seen..." 11/01/2003 p.117 USA Today "...This well-photographed treatment does elicit an under-your-skin sense of dreadful foreboding..." 10/24/2003 p.5E Rolling Stone "...The unique and unforgettable ELEPHANT keeps its eyes wide open..." 11/13/2003 p.105-6 Entertainment Weekly "...Van Sant conjures the feeling of suburban school-year everydayness with Proustian power..." 10/31/2003 p.54 Los Angeles Times "...The film is a stunning response to an American tragedy....It offers radical proof that movies exist not just to entertain, but to provoke riots in our hearts and minds..." 10/24/2003 p.C1 Chicago Sun-Times "It simply looks at the day as it unfolds, and that is a brave and radical act." 11/07/2003 p.40 Rolling Stone 9 of 10 Van Sant wonders, and if you watch Elephant with the attention it deserves, so will you. This - Peter Travers Chicago Sun-Times 10 of 10 Gus Van Sant's Elephant is a record of a day at a high school like Columbine, on the day of a - Roger Ebert
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