Tarsem Singh
5 favorites
Movies & TV
Tarsem Singh Dhandwar, known professionally as Tarsem, is an Indian director who has worked on...
The Fall (2006)
Movie Watch
In a hospital on the outskirts of 1920s Los Angeles, an injured stuntman begins to tell a fellow...
adventure comedy drama underrated tarsem singh lee pace
Immortals (2011)
Movie
Fantasy action movie based on Greek mythology (really quite loosely based). When an evil warlord...
The Cell (2000)
Movie Watch
"The Cell" takes a shocking, riveting mind trip into the dark and dangerous corridors of a serial...
Mirror Mirror (2012)
Movie Watch
Snow White (Lily Collins), an orphaned princess, is the rightful ruler of her kingdom, but a...
TacoDave (3640 KP) rated The Fall (2006) in Movies
Aug 8, 2019 (Updated Aug 8, 2019)
Lee Pace plays a Hollywood stuntman in 1920s Los Angeles who was recently injured. He is stuck in bed in a hospital, filled with depression about the current state of his life.
As he lays in bed one day, a young girl with a broken arm enters the room and begins talking to him. They become fast friends, and he begins telling her a fantastical story about five heroes on a quest. The story is told in many sessions over several days, and each time the visual style and costumes and characters change slightly to match what the girl is imagining as she listens.
I won't spoil any more of the story, except to say this: the man has an ulterior motive for telling this particular story, and sometimes the lines between fantasy and reality, between a happy ending and a tragic one, are blurred.
The real star of this movie is the cinematography. The first time I saw it, I literally gasped at one particular scene transition. It was just perfect. The colors are bold, the settings are almost unreal - like nothing I've seen before (even though they exist in the real world) - and the costumes are amazing. I have literally never seen another movie, before or since, that looks like this one. It is stunning.
They say the director, Tarsem Singh, spent years scouting locations to meet his perfect vision. And it was totally worth it.
If you've never seen "The Fall," I wholeheartedly recommend it. I even own it on DVD, so if you want to borrow it, let me know.