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Demolition Poster

Demolition

Life: Some disassembly required.
2016 | 101m | English

(126538 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 3 (history)

Director: Jean-Marc Vallée
Writer: Bryan Sipe
Staring:
Details

An emotionally desperate investment banker finds hope through a woman he meets.
Release Date: Apr 06, 2016
Director: Jean-Marc Vallée
Writer: Bryan Sipe
Genres: Comedy, Drama
Keywords dark comedy, grieving widower, car accident, death of wife, pregnancy, pot smoking, hospital, vending machine, infidelity, carousel , grief, mourning, investment banker, loss of loved one, car crash, male homosexuality, grieving, defiant, new york city, father-in-law, marijuana, lgbt teen, station wagon
Production Companies Sidney Kimmel Entertainment, Mr. Mudd, Sierra/Affinity, Black Label Media
Box Office Revenue: $4,366,460
Budget: $10,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 10, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Jake Gyllenhaal Davis Mitchell
Naomi Watts Karen Moreno
Chris Cooper Phil Eastwood
Judah Lewis Chris Moreno
C.J. Wilson Carl
Polly Draper Margot Eastwood
Malachy Cleary Davis' Dad
Debra Monk Davis' Mom
Heather Lind Julia
Wass Stevens Jimmy
Blaire Brooks Amy
Ben Cole Steven
Brendan Dooling Todd
Madison Arnold Ray
James Colby John
Alfredo Narciso Michael
Gregory Haney Nurse
James Young Ahmed
Bjorn Dupaty DOT Agent #1
Jane Dashow Bucaneer Diner Waitress
Tom Kemp Dr. Brodkey
Royce Johnson Security Marty
Hani Avital Young Waitress
Celia Au Punk Girl
Elizabeth Loyacano Woman Crying
Stephen Badalamenti Mickey
Mark Lewis Chris' Doctor
Aaron Bantum Chris' Friend
Lytle Harper Attractive Bartender
Kevin Herbst Mourner
Name Job
Christie Espinosa Set Costumer
Jessica Kelly Casting
Adenike Wright Key Hair Stylist
Michelle Johnson Hair Department Head
Leah Katznelson Costume Design
Omar Vaid Property Master
Javiera Varas Art Direction
Jill Losquadro Assistant Costume Designer
Rachel Geary Makeup Artist
John Paino Production Design
Robert Zorella Art Department Coordinator
Angela Mirabella-Friedman Set Costumer
Michael Kall Carpenter
Robert Covelman Set Decoration
Anton Fischlin Sound Effects Editor
Alex Terzieff Stunt Coordinator
Scott Bowers Second Second Assistant Director
Pierre Rovira Construction Coordinator
Francis Gauthier Foley Editor
Brant S. Fagan Steadicam Operator
T.J. Horan Leadman
Paul Col Sound Effects Editor
Elizabeth Himelstein Dialect Coach
Jason Velez Gaffer
Mike Reiersen Second Assistant Director
Edith Bellehumeur Assistant Editor
Marc Boucrot Colorist
William Conacher Dialect Coach
Spring Sutter Production Accountant
Stephen Kozlowski Second Assistant Camera
Erin Borel Production Coordinator
Colin Keech Key Grip
Keith Marlin Second Assistant Director
Thomas Brodeur ADR Editor
Brady Nelson Sound Recordist
Rob Mock Stunt Double
Paul Bode First Assistant Camera
Anne Marie Fox Still Photographer
Urs Hirschbiegel First Assistant Director
Gavin Fernandes Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Joel Timothy Bible Studio Teacher
Simon Meilleur Foley Artist
Louis Gignac Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Frank Graziadei Boom Operator
Ivy Yukiko Ishihara Oldford Assistant Editor
Bryan Sipe Screenplay
Suzanne Smith Crowley Casting
Evelyne Noraz Makeup Department Head
Jean-Marc Vallée Director, Editor
Susan Jacobs Music Supervisor
Yves Bélanger Director of Photography
Christopher Place Stunts
Edward Ioffreda Graphic Designer
Sebastien Lacheray Dialogue Editor
Martin Pinsonnault Sound Designer
Charles Aznavour Songs
Kate Geller Casting Associate
Name Title
Molly Smith Producer
Russell Smith Producer
Trent Luckinbill Producer
Lianne Halfon Producer
Emma McGill Associate Producer
Ellen H. Schwartz Executive Producer
Nathan Ross Executive Producer
Carla Hacken Executive Producer
Sidney Kimmel Producer
Thad Luckinbill Producer
John Malkovich Producer
Helen Estabrook Executive Producer
Jason Reitman Executive Producer
Jon Schumacher Producer
Jean-Marc Vallée Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 28 40 21
2024 5 33 55 21
2024 6 28 48 19
2024 7 28 44 17
2024 8 26 47 17
2024 9 21 32 13
2024 10 25 38 14
2024 11 26 59 14
2024 12 20 33 15
2025 1 22 36 15
2025 2 16 24 4
2025 3 7 23 1
2025 4 3 4 2
2025 5 3 4 3
2025 6 3 4 2
2025 7 4 5 3
2025 8 3 4 2
2025 9 3 3 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 8 516 795
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 896 940
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 491 707
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 476 735
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 323 580
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 643 672
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 310 507
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 631 884

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Reviews

Rangan
7.0

> When we won't feel a thing for a great loss... I am observing closely Jake Gyllenhaal's acting career and he's giving the best performances in all his films. He's one of top 5 best actor of our generation. So technically I love all his films, especially in the recent years and tell me who won't ... if they love good stories and performance. I expected this to be another excellent film and yes it was, but not that great. What he has given to his fans and film viewers is the promise and fulfilled it all the way. So even an average film can automatically become a better one. This film was based on the one of the blacklisted script, but Gyllenhaal's presence made all the difference along with the wonderful director. It was the story of a man who lost his wife in a car accident. His way of grieving is what the film narrates. He realises that he's not able feel a thing when everyone around does, so he decides to make search for the answers and so the bizarre journey begins. The casting was good, but it was all about the Gyllenhaal's role. I like Naomi Watts, but for the first time she looked old to me. And the others did not have much screenspace, except that new face boy who was decent. I think not everyone would enjoy it, it is a weird story of almost a weird person, so you would easily get it. You must need to be a patience, besides it is a dark comedy. You might wonder why the title was named 'Demolition', the films gives a strange demonstration for that in a good way. It is not like a must see, but totally worth for Gyllenhaal alone. I can't say it should have been better, because there's nothing to get better, everything was at its best. 7/10

May 16, 2024
tmdb28039023
5.0

Early on in Demolition there is a brief but interesting scene. Davis Mitchell (Jake Gyllenhaal) is looking in a mirror, crying the way bad actors do – i.e., contorting the face to compensate for the inability to produce tears. Gyllenhaal is of course far from a bad actor, and sure enough, Davis i ... mmediately regains his composure. Was he rehearsing? Quite possibly, especially when you consider that he seems more concerned with the faulty vending machine in the hospital hallway than the fact that his wife Julia (Heather Lind) has just died in a car accident. But Davis is not a heartless bastard; he simply finds it easier to depend on the kindness of strangers. For example, the letter he writes to the vending machine company, which quickly becomes a confessional epistle, and gives us a clue to his impassive reaction to Julia's death. In contrast, Davis is unable to relate to Phil Eastwood (Chris Cooper), Julia's father. As usual, Cooper delivers the goods, in particular an emotional speech about how there is no word – such as ‘orphan’ or ‘widower’ – to describe someone who has lost a child. Ironically, while we've been fascinated by Cooper's craft, Davis’s mind has been wandering, trying to discern why the drinks are so expensive at the restaurant where they're at, without taking the slightest notice of a single word his father-in-law has said. Meanwhile, the letters he will continue to write to the vending machine company customer service department become his main outlet. In a delightful plot twist, Karen Moreno (Naomi Watts), the company's only customer service rep, has been moved to tears by Davis's missives, and begins talking to him on the phone. Davis is certainly an intriguing character, and to develop him Gyllenhaal has borrowed from others as well as himself. Davis is outwardly a vain, aloof yuppie like Christian Bale in American Psycho – although instead of dismembering people, he takes apart machines, not bothering to put them back together again. At the same time, he undergoes an inner transformation that is a combination of Kevin Spacey's in American Beauty and Ron Livingston's in Office Space. Also, Davis becomes the opposite of Gyllenhaal's character in Moonlight Mile. Unfortunately, Demolition loses momentum in the second half, with director Jean-Marc Vallée putting the plot on autopilot. Davis and Karen's relationship is perfect when limited to letters and phone calls, but goes awry as soon as they meet in person. Additionally, and completely out of the clear blue sky, Davis is diagnosed with a rare medical condition that results in part of his heart being apparently eaten by “gypsy moths.” The hell?. All things considered, Demolition feels familiar, and we can recognize elements we've seen elsewhere, but while some of it is clichéd, the outside-the-box use of some of those familiar elements is in itself refreshing; furthermore, Gyllenhaal provides another stellar performance.

Sep 03, 2022