Punch-Drunk Love

2002 "I have a love in my life. It makes me stronger than anything you can imagine."
7.3| 1h36m| R| en| More Info
Released: 11 October 2002 Released
Producted By: Columbia Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A socially awkward and volatile small business owner meets the love of his life after being threatened by a gang of scammers.

Genre

Drama, Comedy, Romance

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Punch-Drunk Love (2002) is now streaming with subscription on CineMAX

Director

Paul Thomas Anderson

Production Companies

Columbia Pictures

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Punch-Drunk Love Audience Reviews

VeteranLight I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.
Arianna Moses Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.
Taha Avalos The best films of this genre always show a path and provide a takeaway for being a better person.
Mandeep Tyson The acting in this movie is really good.
argonaute82 Horrible horrible movie!! Don't watch it! Huge waste of time!!!
seamus-rae While I personally cannot say in good faith that this is Paul Thomas Anderson's best film, it is the one that made me feel the most. I feel like this is a very personal film in an emotional way that PTA's other films like Boogie Nights and The Master can not compare to. It is the story of Barry Eagan, a lonely, awkward, and troubled man who meets the woman of his dreams. While nothing strictly impossible happens in the film, it does present itself as a kind of fantasy. Many unexplained (if not unexplainable) things occur in the film that may throw casual viewers off. The music is sweeping, and the dialogue feels grand. Barry is played by Adam Sandler, who gives one of the best performances of his career. He plays a sort of inverse of his usual Happy Madison charicatures. Barry is awkward, very strange, and has anger management problems. However, here I felt extreme pity for Sandler's character. I understand the feeling of being an outcast, and when Barry says sometimes he "cries for no reason" and begins crying right then, I found myself tearing up. I understand why someone might not react this way to this scene; they may even feel inclined to laugh. Punch-Drunk Love is the kind of movie you either get or you don't. I think I did.
truemovielover-60408 Awful movie.Don't waste your precious time on this,worst characterization and do you know what is the biggest negative of this movie its background score,it just gave me a headache.It's not at all a romantic comedy movie it's a thriller.I just liked the ending of the movie that too OK compared to the remaining part of the film.
jaredpahl Writer/Director Paul Thomas Anderson is responsible for some of the most interesting human dramas of the past 15 years. Boogie Nights, Magnolia, and There Will Be Blood are fascinating character studies, focusing on greed, corruption, parenthood, loss, and suppressed emotions among other things. In Punch-Drunk Love Anderson tackles love. The result is PT Anderson's most complete and most satisfying work yet. Adam Sandler stars as a Barry Egan, a middling salesman and business owner who lives a mundane, solitary life. The film begins with Egan cooking up a scheme of sorts to capitalize on a frequent-flyer sweepstakes' marketing oversight. This scheme becomes an important focal point of the film after he is introduced to a friend of one of his seven sisters, Lena Leonard (Emily Watson). Lena clearly likes him, but Barry's self consciousness and inner sadness keep him from embracing her. There is also a subplot involving a sex-line and money extortion, which may seem out of place in similar love stories, but in the heightened reality, magic-realism world that PT Anderson has created, they are as essential as the rest of the story. I won't spoil how the pieces come together, but I will say that unlike Boogie Nights and Magnolia, movies which promised to tie together multiple plot lines and failed, Punch-Drunk Love weaves the seemingly disconnected stories together to paint a comprehensive picture of a man.And what a man he is. Barry Egan is a complete, unique and constantly fascinating character. He is written well, yes, but Adam Sandler's portrayal is a revelation. Sandler's expressions, body language, mannerisms, and voice are completely in tune with the tone of the movie, for one. There is something slightly off-center with him. He displays a certain type of quirky humor, but there is a deep undercurrent of darkness underneath; insecurities that bubble up to the surface in sometimes explosive ways. This is all communicated through Sandler's acting. There is a scene where Barry is jumped by a gang of "enforcers" and the way Sandler flinches and cries "Ow, ow, ow!" before the guy actually hits him, combined with the way in which he runs away from the fight, it generates a deep empathy for his character in just a few seconds. Sandler's performance is entirely made up of moments like that. He spends most of the movie just restrained enough so that we believe in his few outbursts. You can't help for feel for this guy who has been tortured by his sisters, who feels lonely but can't seem to bring himself to create relationships, who's insecurities have almost emotionally crippled him.Sandler's performance is clearly the focal point of the movie. He creates the empathy for the character, which in turn gives us a rooting interest in the love story. Because of Barry's sincerity, his kindness, and his hidden sadness, you root for him to pull himself together and find the love that is sitting right in front of him. Watson's Lena is an admittedly less rounded character, at least in the way she is written. We don't know why she loves Barry other than the fact that she saw his picture and thought he was cute. However, Emily Watson's performance communicates much more than the script does. We can infer her infatuation with Barry by the way she reacts to his sweet gestures, by the look in her eyes when they are together. Both performances are great, but Watson's is the more subtly affecting.Punch-Drunk Love is simultaneously a superb character study and love story. The filmmaking is rich and exciting, and the performances, especially Adam Sandler's, are endlessly compelling. Paul Thomas Anderson is up to the tricky task of alternating between the strange, the funny, the sad, and the uplifting tones of the story. Punch- Drunk Love might be the most insightful love story I've ever seen. It's a stand-up-and-cheer type of romance that avoids all the usual clichés and flawlessly endears us to a character that we have never seen before. PT Anderson has made more challenging, audacious movies, but none have been as satisfying as this effort.91/100