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Flatliners

You haven't lived until you've died.
2017 | 111m | English

(53130 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

Five medical students, hoping to understand the mystery of what lies beyond life, embark on a dangerous experiment. When their hearts are stopped for a short period of time, they have a near-death experience…
Release Date: Sep 28, 2017
Director: Niels Arden Oplev
Writer: Peter Filardi, Ben Ripley
Genres: Drama, Horror, Thriller
Keywords bullying, remake, accidental death, death, medical student, guilty conscience, near-death experience, competitiveness, scientific experiment
Production Companies Columbia Pictures, Laurence Mark Productions, Cross Creek Pictures, The Safran Company, Furthur Films
Box Office Revenue: $45,200,000
Budget: $19,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Elliot Page Courtney
Diego Luna Ray
Nina Dobrev Marlo
James Norton Jamie
Kiersey Clemons Sophia
Beau Mirchoff Brad Mauser
Wendy Raquel Robinson Sophia's Mother
Kiefer Sutherland Dr. Barry Wolfson
Madison Brydges Tessa
Jacob Soley Alex
Anna Arden Alicia
Miguel Anthony Cyrus Gudgeon
Jenny Raven Irina Wong
Charlotte McKinney Girl on Bicycle
Steve Byers Marlo's Brother
Lisa Codrington Chief Resident
Emily Piggford Neurology Resident #1
Martha Girvin Neurology Resident #2
Taylor Trowbridge Lauren
Nadine Whiteman Paramedic #1
Richard Young The Dean's Secretary
Mary Grant Radiologist
Stefano DiMatteo Paramedic #2
Jimi Shlag Burly Patient
Natasha Bromfield ICU Nurse
Daniela Barbosa Hayley
Jelena Savić Conference Room Medical Student
Brian King Chemistry Teacher
Ali Schwartz Mean Girl #1
Dallas Poynter Mean Girl #2
Avery Bederman Mean Girl #3
Danny Gallagher TEMC Dean
Jessica Rose Puzzle Nurse
Corey Chainey Medical Student
Janet Porter E.R. Doctor
Name Job
Peter Filardi Story
Christine Ebadi Stunts
Dave Lewis Stunts
Cotton Mather Stunts
Michael Bederman Unit Production Manager
Kelly Robertson-Reinhart Assistant Production Manager
Michaela Cheyne Art Direction
Carolyn Arbuckle Script Supervisor
Sean Sealey Steadicam Operator, Camera Operator
Barb Benoit Compositors
Daniel Mermelstein Compositors
Jason Kolodzeijczak Compositors
Dennis Ngariuku Compositors
Richard Rodrigues Compositors
Jignesh Patel Compositors
Sohail Shimi Compositors
Abhijith Sathyan Compositors
Inna Itkin Lighting Artist
Brian Zhang Visual Effects Editor
Mitch Hounslow Visual Effects Editor
Terry Banting Gaffer
Edward Lipscombe Rigging Grip
Geoff Sayer Compositors
Mike Barber Visual Effects Editor
Joseph Roth Assistant Editor
Arthur E. Cooper Second Unit Director of Photography, Camera Operator
Christopher Takacs Rigging Gaffer
Michael Derrah Storyboard Artist
Jay Graham Sculptor
Catherine Lam Set Designer
Anita Cannella Foley Artist
Robin Harlan Foley Artist
Howard London ADR Mixer
Alistair Dempsey Dolly Grip
Sean Keay Electrician
Ben Ripley Screenplay
Tom Elkins Editor
Dino Brancatella Stunts
Daryl Patchett Stunts
Jesse Nye First Assistant Director
Mary Kirkland Set Decoration
Wayne Downer Stunts
Simon Girard Stunts
Avery Queffelec Stunts
Karl Irvine Second Assistant Director
Kerry Spurrell Property Master
Robert Tagliaferri First Assistant Camera
David McKane First Assistant Camera
Wayne Godfrey Key Costumer
Sandra Wheatle Makeup Artist
Dawn Rivard Hairstylist
Scott McManus Utility Sound
Kaz Kobielski Special Effects Supervisor
Justin Haut Production Coordinator
Kirk Cheney Construction Coordinator
Michael Gibson Still Photographer
Emily Cook Casting Associate
Mike Curran Transportation Coordinator
Debra L. Tennant Additional Editing
Brent Robinson Underwater Camera
Don Kozma Makeup Department Head
Karola Dirnberger Hair Department Head
Rod Benjamin Key Grip
Tim Davis Video Assist Operator
Srđan Vilotijević Location Manager
Rebecca Muise Assistant Production Coordinator
William Cheng Set Designer
Beth Mell Third Assistant Director
Stefni Colle Casting Associate
Ritchie Miazek Transportation Captain
Gershon Hinkson First Assistant Editor
Matthew Kamba Post Production Assistant
Maureen Ross Apprentice Sound Editor
Mandell Winter Supervising Sound Editor
Ryan Collins Sound Effects Editor
Sang Kim Assistant Sound Editor
Penka Kouneva Orchestrator
David Clayton Title Designer
George Macri Visual Effects Producer
Peter Giliberti Animation Supervisor
Stevie Ramone Compositors
Christian Moreton Compositors
Lee Zhu Compositors
Mark Agnes Costume Supervisor
Rose-Mary Holosko Makeup Department Head
Kelly Shanks Hairstylist
Kelly Wright Production Sound Mixer
Michael Innanen Special Effects Coordinator
Audra Gorman Location Manager
Steev Beeson Production Accountant
Karen Pidgurski Unit Publicist
Missy Dingman Third Assistant Director
Sophia Welch Casting Assistant
Jeffrey Simlett Dialect Coach
Martin Drover Transportation Co-Captain
Carolyn Calvert Assistant Editor
Bryan Pettibone Post Production Assistant
David Giammarco Sound Re-Recording Mixer
David Esparza Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Sound Designer
Dhyana Carlton-Tims Dialogue Editor
Robin Whittaker Music Editor
Larry Rench Orchestrator
Josh Novak Animation Supervisor
Kayla Cabral Visual Effects Coordinator
Alex Basso Compositors
Wendy Nomiyama Assistant Editor
Annie G. Pizzuto Apprentice Sound Editor
Eryne Prine Foley Editor
Jim Schultz Music Editor
Jeremy Borum Orchestrator
Andrew McPhillips CG Supervisor
Jennifer Maillet Compositors
Stephanie Landriault Compositors
Anny Lang Compositors
Seth Martiniuk Compositors
Yan Dai Compositors
Mahvash Tehrani Compositors
Rachel Beniuk Compositors
Wes While Compositors
Mahsa Ghorbankarimi Lighting Artist
James Chretien Lighting Artist
Douglas Gibbens Visual Effects Editor
Vibhuti Rathod Assistant Director
Greg Gilmore First Assistant Art Direction, Graphic Designer
Itsuko Kurono First Assistant Art Direction
Kristina Walker Compositors
Alex Hirtenstein Compositors
Cale Schmidt Compositors
Joseph Ankrah Compositors
Asim Khan Lighting Artist
Mark Neysmith Quality Control Supervisor
Zoya Rezaie Visual Effects Editor
Travis Gagne Visual Effects Editor
Alexander Turner Boom Operator
Dave Erlichman Dolly Grip
Steve Newburn Prosthetic Designer
Stefany Koutroumpis First Assistant Art Direction
Ken Sinclair Leadman
Devin Doucette ADR Mixer
Aaron Hasson ADR Mixer
Sarah Monat Foley Artist
Jamie Hodgson Generator Operator
Stephan Maia Second Assistant "B" Camera
Vince Deiulis Production Secretary
Brianna Goldie Stunt Double
Eric Yamamoto Storyboard Artist
Nerses Gezalyan Foley Mixer
Sang Jun Kim Assistant Sound Editor
Chris Bacik Drone Pilot
Dennis Kane Assistant Chief Lighting Technician
Tenzin Woeser Electrician
David Murphy Head Carpenter
Roisin McGilly Extras Casting
Patrick Mark Stunts
Niels Arden Oplev Director
Angela Demo Casting
Nathan Barr Original Music Composer
Niels Sejer Production Design
Eric Kress Director of Photography
Layton Morrison Stunt Coordinator
Matt Birman Stunts
Felix Famelart Stunts
Ess Hödlmoser Stunts
Brook Jones Stunts
Patrick Kerton Stunts
Danny Lima Stunts
Chris Mark Stunts
Warren Scherer Stunts
Ana Shepherd Stunts
Larissa Stadnichuk Stunts
John Buchan Local Casting
Jason Knight Local Casting
Peter Schultz Sound Designer
Wesley Sewell Visual Effects Supervisor
Vivek Sharma Compositors
Sue Parker Stunts
Jenny Gering Costume Designer
Name Title
Michael Bederman Executive Producer
Robert Mitas Executive Producer
Hassan Taher Executive Producer
David Blackman Executive Producer
Simon Fawcett Co-Executive Producer
Brian Oliver Executive Producer
Laurence Mark Producer
Peter Safran Producer
Justin Ardalan-Raikes Co-Executive Producer
Michael Douglas Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
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2024 5 56 97 36
2024 6 34 54 19
2024 7 28 46 15
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2024 11 833 833

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Reviews

Frank Ochieng
N/A

There is always a risk involved when revisiting cinema from the past and dusting it off in favor of an ambitious remake for the consideration of today’s adventurous movie-going audience. Hollywood has done this tactic for decades now so this is nothing new to contemplate as food for thought. It is o ... ne thing to try and bring back the freshness and impact of the original blueprint from yesteryear for a distinctive film that proved to be critically acclaimed, extremely popular, conveniently trendy and memorable for it box office heyday. So what gives for trying to resuscitate a mediocre 1990 Brat Pack medical psychological thriller and re-packaging it as an updated glossy horror/SF fantasy focusing on the tiresome and exploitative life-and-death theme for the millennial mindset? Perhaps director Niels Arden Oplev (‘The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo’) can answer this puzzling inquiry as he presents front and center his modern-day take on the nearly three decade-year old Joel Schumacher-directed DOA drama **Flatliners**. Indeed, Schumacher’s original outing was not what one would call engaging or stimulating but at least it boasted a noteworthy listing of talented young Hollywood hotshots (Julia Roberts, Kiefer Sutherland, Billy Baldwin, Kevin Bacon, Hope Davis, Oliver Platt, etc.) to give a creative jolt to this highly contrived existential experimentation regarding the afterlife. However, Oplev concocts a faceless rehash that offers tepid thrills and chills, frivolous fright impulses that amount to all the riveting tension of a leaky bed pan in the emergency ward and a paper-thin payoff that never quite delivers. In portraying young idealistic doctors that have an affinity for exploring the unknown realm of the human condition beyond the physical alertness of existence is somewhat of an interesting concept in consciousness on various levels of medical science, spirituality and just plain man-made curiosity. Nevertheless, **Flatliners** (Oplev’s version, of course) does not have the inquisitive juice to lubricate any in-depth instinctive moral dilemma or philosophical ambivalence in this disjointed supernatural medical melodrama lacking a pulse (yes, pun intended). Oplev’s unimaginative direction and the run-of-the-mill script by screenwriter Ben Ripley does nothing to pump any bombastic blood in this cardiac caper that…er…has no intriguing heart (okay…another pun intended). Ironically, reviving the previous serving of the 27-year old Schumacher vehicle for a contemporary copycat that drips more than a faulty IV bag is the biggest fearful flatliner fantasy to behold. Oscar-nominated Ellen Page (yesterday’s treasured darling courtesy of her spunky turn as a self-deprecating pregnant teen in 2007’s ‘Juno’) plays the film’s ringleader Courtney, a medical student whose guilt and fascination with death is incredulously shared by her group of contemporaries. Courtney is carrying a psychological burden involving a deceased sister, so naturally this is among the unfinished issues that haunt her personally. Basically, Courtney and her crew conduct risque experiments in the hospital’s underground basement in which they enthusiastically kill themselves only to be brought back to life afterwards. During their so-called flatliner sessions, they are disturbed by the ominous sensations of their life-and-death odyssey but remain captivated and invigorated at the same time. This does not deter Courney and her peers from stopping their hearts for the eerie adventurous rush they receive when entering the zone of a dream-like or appropriately nightmarish tranquility. Among Courtney’s fellow medical heart-stopping thrill-seekers are James Norton’s Jamie, Nina Dobrev’s Marlo, Kiersey Clemon’s Sophia and Diego Luna’s Rudy, who is the recipient of the golden nugget for playing Page’s/Courtney’s lovey-dovey boyfriend whose primary role is to revive his sweetie and her associates after their treacherous trip through death’s delusional door. In any event, these halting heartthrobs (get the double meaning?) possess this awkward ambition to prove whether or not there is brain activity after leaving the land of the living. When the flatliners return to their lively senses, they acknowledge that the brain functioning has sharpened for the better. On the flip side, Courtney and her comatose cohorts all start to undergo some supernatural psychosis that promotes an array of problematic mental dysfunction. The significant vital signs include the drudging up of dark tormented secrets embedded in their damages psyches, monotonous memories that create disturbing unrest and an overall nervousness undefined in and out of their death-defying field trip into mercurial madness. Interestingly, the mystery is not so much how dedicated and challenged these model-ready med students are ready to tip toe through the tulips of traumatic trances while bodily stopping their organs in the name of scientific ambivalence. The real mystery is why this insipid remake of **Flatliners** was even made and revisited in the first place? For starters, Opley’s nervous system narrative into the realm of human consciousness feels clumsy, trivial, pointless and frivolously far-fetched. Even Schumacher’s original edition, albeit it a shoddy one, had some semblance of attempted earnestness despite its cockeyed and uneven capricious construction. Here, Opley does nothing in the least to give his **Flatliners** any sense of flair, distinctive energy, dubious drive, lofty scares or hypnotic insight into this aimless, recycled material. The film looks cheaply produced and the real message of these young doctors’ journey into an abyss of deadened state is merely reduced to them hyperventilating at their own psychological indiscretions from the past. Sounds rather captivating, huh? The true malpractice at work here is the fraudulent posturing of **Flatliners** coming off as an intriguing mega-medical malaise of major proportions. Plus, the obligatory jump-scares are relentlessly obvious and overplayed. Simply put, this drowsy doctored drama has nothing to say or suggest other than to sprinkle some meaningless titillating CGI imagery around to give this horror-induced hokum some creepy credibility. Although the winking gimmick of having original **Flatliners** star Keifer Sutherland return to his roots regarding the film’s reminiscence as a middle-aged lecturer is somewhat of a feel-good nostalgic touch, there is not much else that one can hang their hat on for this baseless paranormal puff piece into death-style delirium. Page’s Courtney and her care-giving counterparts come off more as polished twenty-something treats that should be shooting a provocative TV ad for The Gap clothing store rather than portraying death-jumping doctors. Sophomoric dialogue and the soulless randomness into the landscape of living and dying take its silly-minded toll beyond belief. Page, once an adventurous and resourceful actress with a nuanced nose for notable colorful parts in indie and mainstream films, is embarrassingly handcuffed to this SF/horror health care hazard of a motion picture. What **Flatliners** needs or any other regrettable notions of its future sequels or remakes is a decorative quarantine sign hanging on its hospital bed. **Flatliners** (2017) Columbia Pictures 1 hour 48 minutes CAST: Ellen Page, James Norton, Kiefer Sutherland, Diego Luna, Nina Dobrev and Kiersey Clemons DIRECTOR: Niels Arden Oplev WRITER: Ben Ripley MPAA Rating: PG-13 GENRE: Horror/Science Fiction/Drama/Fantasy Critic’s rating: * 1/2 stars (out of 4 stars) (c) **Frank Ochieng** (2017)

May 16, 2024
Ruuz
4.0

I thought the original _Flatliners_ was okay, but I was never a big fan. That said, I was still at least partly on board for the potential of a _Flatliners_ TV series. That idea was abandoned in favour of a straight up film-remake, but still I was interested if for no other reason than the cast. The ... end result? This one's even worse than the original. _Final rating:★★ - Had some things that appeal to me, but a poor finished product._

Jun 23, 2021
John Chard
6.0

Line of flatness for fans of the original - for others not so much. Strictly on a personal level, I always felt that the original Flatliners was average at best. A missed opportunity to use the premise for frightening results, to unnerve, unhinge, whilst intelligently examining the life after dea ... th question. So when news of this 2017 remake broke I wasn't in the least bit surprised, the idea at the narrative core was ripe for further filmic delvings. Niels Arden Oplev's 2017 version is itself problematic, and a long way from being all the things I so wanted from the original film, but at least it has its own twists, a supernatural slant for scares. The makers are also to be applauded for making a truly bold decision in the story, rendering complaints about this not offering anything new as being redundant. Chances are that if you are a fan of the original film you will hate this, if like me you have no affinity to it then this is an ok time waster. While for those not familiar with the 1990 pic can go in for some mild shock and afterlife dalliances. 6/10

May 16, 2024
GenerationofSwine
1.0

So this is like Flatliners... only its not as scary because modern audiences. And it doesn't offer the same satire because modern audiences. And it gender-swapped the main character because modern audiences. And because of the Swap she couldn't be as dynamic because that would show weakness an ... d yadda yadda yadda so you end up not really caring because she never comes across as a real person, just checked boxes. And in the end you have wasted a chunk of your life again because you Millennial wife thought it might be cool to watch the remake of one of the movies your old Gen-X butt raved about

Jan 12, 2023