|
|||||||||||||
| Adam Sandler | Barry Egan |
| Emily Watson | Lena Leonard |
| Rico Bueno | Rico |
| Philip Seymour Hoffman | Dean Trumbell |
| Seann Conway | Customer |
| Jason Andrews | Operator Carter |
| Hazel Mailloux | Rhonda |
| Don McManus | Plastic |
| David Schrempf | Customer |
| Luis Guzmán | Lance |
| Karen Kilgariff | Anna |
| Julie Hermelin | Kathleen |
| Salvador Curiel | Sal |
| Jorge Barahona | Jorge |
| Ernesto Quintero | Ernesto |
| Director | Paul Thomas Anderson
|
| Producer | Paul Thomas Anderson
Daniel Lupi |
| Writer | Paul Thomas Anderson
|
| Cinematography | Robert Elswit
|
| Musician | Jon Brion
|
|
|
Barry (Adam Sandler) is a vaguely-unsatisfied toilet plunger salesman living a life of drudgery, his only contact with others his insensitive and emotionally cruel family. That is, until one day where a harmonium falls off the back of a truck in front of him, and his life begins to transform into a beautiful and surreal experience as he encounters a new love. He meets a mysterious woman, Lena (Emily Watson) and pursues her with reckless gusto, acting as irrationally as any man in love can do, and even destroying a restaurant bathroom in the process. Punch-Drunk Love is a genre-defying, romantic film that will make you smile and wince, often at the same time. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Features
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||