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Sleep Dealer

Sleep Dealer (2008)

December. 10,2008
|
6
| Drama Thriller Science Fiction

Set in a near-future, militarized world marked by closed borders, virtual labor and a global digital network that joins minds and experiences, three strangers risk their lives to connect with each other and break the barriers of technology.

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Reviews

BootDigest
2008/12/10

Such a frustrating disappointment

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Freaktana
2008/12/11

A Major Disappointment

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Inmechon
2008/12/12

The movie's only flaw is also a virtue: It's jammed with characters, stories, warmth and laughs.

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Winifred
2008/12/13

The movie is made so realistic it has a lot of that WoW feeling at the right moments and never tooo over the top. the suspense is done so well and the emotion is felt. Very well put together with the music and all.

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allyse67-234-997100
2008/12/14

I had read about this film years before I actually saw it. The write up was intriguing enough that I kept it and when I saw the film, I understood why the reviewer said it was not to be missed. As society grows more and more tech-reliant, people become more and more isolated while still being "connected". This movie explores how little we might understand about what and who is really behind the things we enjoy and how little we may truly know about what it's like to walk in someone else's shoes. Poignant, moving, and completely unforgettable.

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fraser-simons
2008/12/15

Sleep dealer. I really, really liked this movie!I found it very underrated and really liked seeing cyberpunk from another country. In this case, a futuristic Mexico utilizes technology depriving the general population of a natural and organic lifestyle. It starts out in a rural setting where the only tech shown is used to oppressive the general population. As far as we can tell, anyways. The protagonist Memo, seeks out tech though despite the warnings and stories of his father about how life was before, and primarily how much better things were. The plot really begins when the son accepts tech and uses it for its benefits. Like most cyberpunk, most of the rest of the film goes into the downside of tech and the people in control of it. Spoilers! X X X X X X XWhen his choices get his father killed. He begins to go move against the system, as in the genre that always gets a loved one killed so it's not surprising. What IS surprising is that the protagonist in this case is a really relatable and more socially adjusted hero than most of the genre. In fact, everyone else isn't because of technology - but we don't learn about that until later. To reinforce the rural pastiche combined with Mexican culture I really enjoyed that cyberpunk music basically doesn't exist in the movie at all. It makes it feel authentic, different, and genuinely new. The theme can ultimately be boiled down to this but there's some great sub themes/plots at work as well:"Sometimes you control the machine and sometimes the machine controls you"Organic seemed to be a pretty warm colour pallet with technology contrasting it. There appeared to be a colour pallet for each character, however it may have been different themes as I only noticed towards the end. So rather than specifically each character it may have been something else but I noticed when it switched for each character so, not positive. It seemed to be:Green for Rudy Blue for memo And red for the LuzThis is where things got even more interesting as the story diverges from just Memo to weave a narrative that interacts with Memo and eventually, all of them. He moves from his small town to the big city to make money and send it home. He needs to support his family now. Slowly the other narratives work their way in, this worked only somewhat for Rudy, and pretty well for Luz and Memo. Here in the city the theme is really reinforced by Luz who's all but swallowed by the city by now. In order to get by the main piece of tech is introduced: people sell their memories "online". She's trying to weave narratives in order to get by, and when she meets Memo their initial relationship is there only so she can sell the memories so she can get by. Of course this eventually leads to drama but during which Luz is has a great line:"What was it like to work with something so...real?"She's talking about Memo working the earth with his father, a really foreign concept to many people nowadays, including me. But in the movie it's even more of a crazy concept as the other way people get by is by hooking themselves up to a device that lets them do jobs in America via robots. It's commentary on foreign workers in America and what that could possibly lead to is really interesting and meshed well with the overall theme at play. Memo utilizes this technology despite that he quickly realizes it isn't good for him but he makes money and sends it back home anyways. It turns out that Luz's tech is robbing her of her memories because just like social media now, she only finds them valuable if people pay for them and validate them. And Memo, his tech is robbing him of his humanity and slowly, his life. He has to modify his body to use the tech and he begins to understand why the factories are called sleep dealers after he's sucked into the same cycle everyone else is in the city. How they decide to fight the system is both overt and subtle. I really liked this line from it where Memo says: "What happened to the river was happening to me" I'm not going to spoil the meaning but I really liked that comparison and what they do to take back some control. It all creates a very satisfying loop that eventually ties back into a really organic story. It was very surprising because it's not really rated that well at all. I love seeing cyberpunk from other lens's and this futuristic, organic tale of Mexico really hit all my buttons. It doesn't have cheap production values either. Check it out!

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charles000
2008/12/16

Wow . . . wow! Fantastically well done, smartly written story, with a punch. On so many levels, this transcends merely being a "sci-fi" story. Never have seen Alex Rivera's work before, or even heard of this film until now (Nov, 2015), but he deserves my respect for how this was directed and put together. For all of the fluffy comic book crap that gets perpetually pumped out of Hollywood, which is like polluting your mind with neural donuts, here's an example of filmcraft done exactly right.No over the top gratuitous CGI, or crazy sex and violence just to fill up screen time, but just a really well told story, that makes you think, and peer into a near future realm which is not at all that implausible.Leonor Varela is an interesting actress, but Luis Pena absolutely spot on delivers his character. 10 stars? In a heartbeat!

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Matt Kracht
2008/12/17

The plot: A Mexican laborer, falsely targeted by the USA as a terrorist, goes to work for a "sleep factory", where he remotely operates robots for American corporations.Sleep Dealer is a return to classic cyperpunk, like the early novels of William Gibson. It's a very believable world, full of near-future tech that's both intriguing and disheartening. Like Gibson's leftist criticism back in the 1980s, it examines globalism, isolationism, nationalism, and imperialism. It never becomes anti-American, but it probably will offend some conservative Americans. Some of the ideas are really great, and I liked how the movie played with current technological and political trends. Hopefully, if the movie were made today, it'd be a little more optimistic, but I kind of doubt it.The biggest problem I had with Sleep Dealer was that it was so overt and explicit about its themes. Perhaps the director thought that these themes were too important to be coy about them. Regardless, it came across as a bit unsubtle and preachy. If you agree with the premises, you'll probably be pretty forgiving. Unfortunately, the acting isn't all that great, though it's good enough for a low budget, genre film. The special effects are a bit iffy, as well, but most people probably aren't expecting Avatar.As long as you're willing to overlook some faults, this is an enjoyable and socially conscious science fiction movie that anyone can enjoy, regardless of their nationality.

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