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Bug 2006 123movies

Bug 2006 123movies

Paranoia is contagiousNov. 11, 200698 Min.
Your rating: 0
8 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Bug 2006 123movies, Full Movie Online – Having escaped her abusive ex-husband Goss, recently released from state prison, Agnes, a lonely waitress with a tragic past moves into a sleazy, rundown motel. Her lesbian co-worker R.C. introduces her to Peter, a peculiar, paranoiac drifter and they begin a tentative romance. However, things aren’t always as they appear and Agnes is about to experience a claustrophobic nightmare reality as the bugs begin to arrive….
Plot: In Oklahoma, Agnes, a lonely waitress living in an isolated and dilapidated roadside motel, meets Peter, a quiet and mysterious man with whom she establishes a peculiar relationship.
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Ratings:

6.1/10 Votes: 35,675
61% | RottenTomatoes
62/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 438 Popularity: 7.508 | TMDB

Reviews:

BUG is how theater should exist on film
I’ll just come out and say it – I love this movie. But is it a movie? I can’t really answer that. Honestly, this doesn’t really feel or play out like a movie but maybe that’s just me. Keep a few things in mind: this is based on a stage play, the screenplay was written by the author of the play, Friedkin is a big fan of the play, and the lead (Michael Shannon) is from the original production of the stage play. Got that? Good. You know how they say Sam Mendes brings “theater” to the “big screen” (and I say F that) – well, BUG is how theater should exist on film. I don’t know, maybe I’m over analyzing. But while I’m over analyzing I’ll throw this out there – Michael Shannon gives one of the best performances I’ve seen in a long time. And screw it – Ashley Judd really surprised me in this too. Harry Connick Jr. is a little dead weight but you can’t win ’em all Harry. Mix some old Cronenberg with a pinch of Lynch (can I coin that?), throw it on an Off Broadway stage and see what sticks, then have Friedkin direct it and you’ve got BUG.
Review By: mickeyshamrock
Another play adaptation not to miss
The Exorcist’s William Friedkin makes a strong comeback directing Bug, the screen version, adapted by original playwright Tracy Letts, of his off-Broadway powerhouse about trailer trash paranoia that rocked the Village’s Barrow Street Theater two years ago. The Barrow Street Bug didn’t require any big names or high production values – the stage didn’t even have a curtain – for its startling effects. Twenty dollars got you an evening of strange thinking and unpredictable behavior. The NYTimes called it “the season’s wildest ride”; The New Yorker’s sketch suggested it was the best play in town. This time there are new faces, all fine, though they couldn’t be any better than the original stage cast. Here is Harry Connick Jr. playing Goss, a brute menace and an unwelcome surprise for Agnes (Ashley Judd, replacing Shannon Cochran in the original stage cast). Goss is Agnes’ ex, turning up unannounced after two years in stir.

This obviously wasn’t a play that needed a lot of opening up. Claustrophobia is one of its most essential elements. Friedkin wisely keeps his film version simple and boxed-in, adding sweaty closeups that show just how intense and brilliant the acting is, and just a couple of shots of other locales.

Agnes resides in a sleazy motel room on the edge of the desert — which is the play’s set — and works in a bar with her lesbian friend R.C. (Lynn Collins). In the film we get a glimpse of the crowded dive. We also see the motel from outside and above. Agnes, for whom life is an obvious struggle, is tormented by the loss of her little son, who disappeared years ago in a supermarket. Later R.C. brings an odd, seemingly recessive guy named Peter (Michael Shannon) whose gradually emerging story becomes the film’s/play’s focus. He claims to be a Gulf War veteran. A fifth character is a man who claims to be a doctor, played by Brian F. O’Byrne.

Bug is about process, and the process is Peter’s taking over of Agnes’ fragile mental and physical world and the destruction of his own in a compulsive, creepy, but somehow exhilarating display of sleazy folie a deux. The insects that he sees everywhere, inside and outside, parallel the contagion of his diseased mind, which sends out invisible tendrils that envelop Agnes. Letts’ astonishing dialogue metes out madness in gradually increasing doses. The fun is watching this happen and looking for transitions in the seamless and maniacally clever writing. Friedkin’s filming gives a kind of lunar, hallucinatory edge and the action’s intensity bursts from the screen. But all in all, nothing could outdo that evening at the Barrow Street Theater. It’s surprising that the whole thing works almost as well in a movie, but where it doesn’t, you realize that theater has certain powers found nowhere else.

The main US reviewers who check stuff out at Cannes and assess its commercial potential (Hollywood Reporter, Variety) think Bug is a bust. The title seems to remind them of Saw, and they judge this to be at best a cheap horror movie that can draw in an audience only through sensational trailers. That is shortsighted. Bug is horrific, but it’s mainly a psychological study, executed with a wildly audacious taste for theatrical surprise and an uncanny ability to calibrate progressive character revelation. Friedkin appears to have returned to his roots here in dealing with a play and handling it with a fine minimalism. It is true certainly that an unsophisticated audience may find Bug disappointing, or too talky. But its real audience is the savvy Barrows Street kind, art house folks not unfamiliar with Beckett, Pinter, or Sam Shepard.

Review By: Chris Knipp

Other Information:

Original Title Bug
Release Date 2006-11-11
Release Year 2006

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 42 min (102 min)
Budget 4000000
Revenue 8095658
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Drama, Horror, Thriller
Director William Friedkin
Writer Tracy Letts
Actors Ashley Judd, Michael Shannon, Harry Connick Jr.
Country United States, Germany
Awards 1 win & 6 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby, Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Panavision Cameras and Lenses
Laboratory Technicolor, Hollywood (CA), USA
Film Length 2,779 m (Portugal, 35 mm)
Negative Format 35 mm (Kodak)
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm (Fuji Eterna-CP 3513DI), D-Cinema

Bug 2006 123movies
Bug 2006 123movies
Bug 2006 123movies
Bug 2006 123movies
Bug 2006 123movies
Original title Bug
TMDb Rating 6.113 438 votes

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