Bliss (2021) Poster

(I) (2021)

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6/10
Sci-fi or insanity or drugs or a little of each?!
planktonrules7 March 2022
"Bliss" is a genuinely odd film...one that easily is open to various interpretations. And, as such, it's a real departure for Owen Wilson and Salma Hayek.

The film is very difficult to describe. Instea of explaining the actual confusing plot, I'd just say that the film features the pair as either schizophrenics, drug addicts, drug addicts AND schizophrenics or they really are brilliant researchers working on creating an alternate reality!! Sounds weird and confusing...you betcha.

So is it worth watching? Well, it certainly is NOT a film for everyone...even the average viewer. This isn't becasue it's necessarily bad....just incredibly weird. If you have a high threshold for the weird by all means watch it. Otherwise, you might just wanna pass on this one.
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5/10
Wrongly Advertised
frankie-089086 February 2021
Those who marketed this movie made a huge mistake. They gave a high expectation of a Syfy type movie. I watched this movie with exactly that in mind and it left me lost and confused. I really believe it's because of the lasting impression the marketing left on me.

It took me just about past the midway point of the movie I started to realize it wasn't about Syfy at all. It's about drug addiction, the mentally disabled, and homelessness. The moment I recognized this, I had a better impression of the movie. Having a career in LE in a city I experienced many with those difficulties. It's easy to criticize the homeless or dismiss them, but if you had a better understanding of the issues they're having mentally your feelings would change. And I think this movie did a good job putting the viewer inside the mind of an addict/mentally ill person. I only wish those in charge of the marketing would have done a better job.

With having a better understanding of the movie, the actors did a great job.
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6/10
Brilliant but heart wrenching portrayal of addiction
schloot13 March 2021
This is one of the best movies I've seen that shows an insight into addiction. It actually was very moving, and anyone who has experienced addiction personally or with a loved one, it likely will bring up many emotions. I would highly recommend this movie.
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Inside the head of a mentally ill person on drugs. Is it "Bliss"?
TxMike28 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
There is no way that we normal people can actually identify with how the mind of a mentally ill person on drugs works. We sometimes read news items about it, and wonder what "possessed" people to act out their strange behavior. But here, in this fictional movie, the writer/director makes his best effort. For the most part it is interesting and entertaining.

Owen Wilson, long known for his goofy roles, is in fact a fine dramatic actor. We see him in an office as a sales guy, we see him called into his bosses' office to get fired. We see him talk to his daughter about attending her graduation. We see him in a lab-like setting being referred to as "Doctor". But when it is all done we still wonder which was real and which was just in his mind, as a faulty narrator. We pretty well know the scenes on the lake (in beautiful Croatia) are in his imagination.

Not at all a mainstream movie, my wife and I enjoyed it on Amazon streaming movies.
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3/10
I had no idea
indialm9 March 2021
As a few have written here already, this is a film about addiction, albeit in a new, different and if you have not been personally touched by addiction, confusing way. I also thought this film was a Sci Fi comedy about different realities akin to "The Matrix." It wasn't until I began reading the other reviews that I realized it was about drug addiction. In this regard the filmmaker made a lot of assumptions, first and foremost that every viewer would get that the main character, played by Owen Wilson, was fighting his drug demons starting when he is snorting his pain medicine. (And once again the world is fed the false narrative that everyone taking an opioid must be abusing it, thus causing a lot of distress, hurt and potential to commit suicide for people suffering with chronic pain.) And this is the difference between those who suffer from addiction and those who are dependent on ANY medicine. The addict cannot function, as others do, in this world we live in without breaking laws, some social, some literal. So I didn't pick up on the ingestion of little blue crystals as anything more than something as in Alice in Wonderland and NOT crystal meth. Even to the last frame did I never make a drug connection. If I had, I still would have watched the film, but wouldn't have sat there, as my companion did as well, never making the drug association. I'd suggest to future filmmakers to not assume your audience knows the world you are portraying and that it's your job to give them the information they need so they do.
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7/10
Not Sci-Fi
neil-433557 February 2021
Whatever impression the trailers or your film guide have given you - this movie is not a Sci-Fi movie - its a simple story about how a man can simply drop out of society because of things happening outside his control, and the challenges faced by homeless addicts with with mental health issues, top acting and a decent story and far better than a lot of the dross that has been unleashed on a disappointed public during the pandemic.
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5/10
Shades of Kubrick and Cronenberg
lavatch5 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
"Bliss" begins as a Walter Mitty-type film with a lazy, day-dreaming worker in an office drawing pictures of his fantasy home. It then takes the audience on a psychodelic journey of the mind.

The strength of the film was the good performances and some great location footage of Los Angeles. The filmmakers were striving for a style that combined the imagination of Stanley Kubrick and the weirdness of David Cronenberg.

The Kubrick-Cronenberg connection was apparent in the film's evocation of the macabre. The grisly death of Greg Whittle's boss; the pathos of an old woman on a walker knocked to the floor of a roler-skating rink; and an unruly mob at a party being separated like the Red Sea with a wave of Greg's hand, are all examples of something approaching dark comedy.

But unlike the profundity of a film by Kubrick or Cronenberg, the result of "Bliss" was an exercise in style over substance. The long and dull portion set in the fantasy kingdom of Dr. Isabel Clemens and Dr. Greg Whittle was was slow-paced and tedious and closer to a European art film.

It was clear that Isabel and Greg would eventually return to their homeless headquarters and that their supply of hallucinogens would eventually run out. The inconsequential theme of fantasy versus reality tried to hold the disparate elements of the film experience together.

By the end, Greg would appear to be under the care of a daughter who genuinely loves him. But, based on the depth of Greg's character flaws, it seems likely that he will blow his chance for recovery. The film is really about two luckless losers who went on a drug-induced stupor and essentially returned back to square one.
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7/10
Psst, anyone know where I can get me 10 of those blue crystals?
Top_Dawg_Critic4 August 2021
Another creative wonder by Mike Cahill. Unless someone fully understands, or has/had addiction and/or mental health issues, this film may be confusing.

I like how Cahill thinks out of the box, and the way this story was portrayed, was genius, albeit flawed. His screenplay was somewhat all over the place, sloppy, and did have some plot and technical issues. The story didn't flow and transition as well as it could have, like it did in his earlier film, Another Earth. Although the pacing was slightly better in this one, it still needed improvement and less filler for the 103 min runtime. For me, this film missed the mark and had much more potential than what I saw. Owen Wilson and Salma Hayek were great in their roles, as were the rest of the cast.

It's a different film, but once you get what's going on, you'll appreciate it a little more. It's a decent one-time watch. So it's a 7/10 from me.
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2/10
Convoluted nonsense
taedirish5 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Like many, the trailer gave me a very different impression than the actual film. It's pretty obvious that it's about mental illness, however the movie attempts to combine that with some gibberish sci-fi story about a "brain box" and reality being a simulation (all connected thru some rigged cpap machines... The movie tries so hard to become multi-layered that it becomes just damn confusing and scattered. Combined with an ending that doesn't really make any sense...ur left wondering, was it all imagined? Was salma hayek's character real? It's about as satisfying as the ending to The Sopranos, maybe even less.
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7/10
Incorrectly marketed... but fresh and inventive.
tccandler7 March 2021
This film is marketed as a sci-fi, altered reality adventure. It isn't. "Bliss" is a drug-induced hallucination from the perspective of a man who has lost touch with reality and fallen in love with an enabler. This is his struggle to regain his sobriety and reconnect with his estranged daughter. The film is a bit messy and the acting is simply passable... However, it is fresh and inventive, and it moves along swiftly.
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5/10
This is a Heartwrenching Film of Desperation, Not Quite Sci-Fi
lambiepie-217 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Let me also join in and say as a marketer, this film's marketing was terrible. Totally gives folks the wrong idea if they're expecting a neat little sci-fi film.

"Bliss" is not a sci-fi film. It's not quite a fantasy film either. It is a film about designer drug addiction, homelessness, mental illness, depression, separation of a family. It's about a man played by Owen Wilson, whose whole world fell apart at once. He was already on the edge of everything: homelessness, drug addiction, etc.; as he's going through a divorce, his family was split. He loses his job and meets a real bohemian, homeless, street prostitute, drug addict played by Salma Hayek. She convinces him to take a synthetic designer drug and escape to a whole world where they are together is not the real world.

The film's marketing makes you think this is going to be a kind of sci-fi/fantasy feature, but it isn't. Maybe the thought was to make it one, but it couldn't fit in the drug addicts and homeless as that took over the film more than "the other world." It tried - it tried. It started well - the twist with his boss was funny, and then meeting Selma's character in a bar and how she laid it all out had that sci-fi/fantasy promise.

Then the movie goes into the homelessness and addiction and prostitution, and you get as confused as Owen's character, so by the time they get back to the sci-fi/fantasy element, you know it's a drug trip.

There is no happy ending here. Just go in knowing this is another way to show co-dependency, drug addiction, homelessness, surviving on the street, period.
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10/10
My theory (who is with me?)
suzidap4 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Ok, now a review with spoilers. My theory is: Isabel doesn't exist. She is the human representation of the drugs. And once you have this is mind, all the alleged non-sense starts to make total sense. She appears when he is desperate, offering some magical help, they suddenly get close, because of her he loses his phone, his money, steels a car, ends up living on the street, going to dangerous places, having trouble with the police. She takes him to that dream world. People are debating which of the worlds are real, but the "perfect" one never existed, he was allucinating and woke up when he listened to his daughter.

He even suggests that Isabel kills him, but when he is determined to stay in the reality, she disappears.

Isabel is the drug.
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7/10
Really Great Ideas With A Passing Execution.
Neon_Gold6 February 2021
This film has so many interesting ideas but i found that it doesn't really follow all of them though.

I'm pretty confused at the low score and how badly it is being panned by critics.

I thought the acting was pretty good and i was really interested in these characters. Which is where i think some of the issue are found.

I think this film needed to take a step back from the sci-fi elements. They are very sparse but are there enough to hinder the true storyline. If i am being honest i think the whole 2nd act needed retooling. It was like a brick wall that the movie just slammed into. And then it just sort of slogged along. Once again i thought 'oh this is interesting' but then it just like stalled and i sat around thinking what is this movie now. It kind of gets its momentum back in the 3rd act but i think the 1st is where this movie shines.

This movie is also great at visual storytelling. The production design, costuming and make up all work so well. It allows you to understand what the film is trying to say before the film explicitly tells you and i though that was really good.

I honestly think this movie could have been great but it just got its self bogged down with the sci-fi part and trying to trick? the audience.

I think it held its cards too close to its chest but i think the twist is blatantly clear from literally the first scene. This isn't a bad thing at all. I think it would have been better letting us view this world though the lens of us knowing twist from the beginning. I think that would have been a much more interesting and very eye opening character and subject study.
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1/10
Boring
gotenks_690014 March 2021
It's a slow movie, honestly it was boring and not captivating to us. Others may enjoy it but personally it was not for me.
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Eternal Matrix of the Spotless Mind
anduman9 February 2021
The review title contains the two films that blew my mind as much as this one did.

This film explores and exploits the idea of the unreliable narrator to the maximum. It poses questions, answers them, but then takes away the answers.

It keeps the two far sides of the possibility so precisely balanced and strong, that you could tie a string in-between, and the tension would be literally palpable. The tension that keeps guessing and wondering the entire film, until the Very Last Second.

It is incredibly dystopian but also utopian at the same time, and you can't help but feel for the unluckiest guy in the world, who might know the absolute truth.
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1/10
One of the worst movies I've ever seen
lovelovedeadpool20 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Watching the previews I was very excited to see this movie, it turns out it was not a sci-fi movie but a depressing, boring, poorly done movie about addiction. If I can give this movie 0 stars I would have. I do nothing all day and I still feel like this movie had wasted over an hour of my life.
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7/10
Powerful
phulla7 February 2021
I didn't watch any trailers nor read any reviews, and I don't want to spoil this film but it's well worth watching, it's frustratingly slow to begin with and does drag in parts but that adds to the cause and affect.

It's great to see this film from the point of the main characters and I caught on fairly early in the film, but some may be confused as to what's happening and why, but just hang on and you'll get onboard even if it takes you a bit longer than 10 minutes.
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4/10
instead, check out Cahill's earlier work
ferguson-65 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Greetings again from the darkness. We each have a vision of what our ideal world would look like. When we first meet Greg (Owen Wilson), he's working on multiple sketches of his: a picturesque Mediterranean villa and a beautiful woman to share it with. Greg seems to be escaping from a world that isn't so great. He's recently divorced, estranged from his son, and evades his daughter's attempt at reconciliation. He's also taking some type of prescription drug that he's clearly abused. On top of all that, Greg is supposed to be working his office job for a customer service company aptly named, "Technical Difficulties". The phone bank of employees are trained to answer each call with, "I'm sorry". At this early point, we aren't certain if this is a parody of office life or the set up for something else. Our uncertainty remains even after Greg has a disastrous private meeting with his boss.

Things really get bizarre when Greg bolts from the office and into the local bar across the street. It's here where he first encounters Isabel (Salma Hayek dressed like a witch), who introduces him to the idea that this world isn't real. None of it ... except him. She has created a computer simulation of life and there are two pills/crystals for escape (this should sound familiar to fans of THE MATRIX). The yellow one allows Greg and Isabel to bend the laws of physics, while the blue one jolts them to the world that magically matches Greg's sketches. Like anyone with newly found superpowers, they head to the local roller rink, and take turns causing other skaters to fall until everyone else lay unconscious on the wooden floor. It's at about this point where I'm fighting the urge to give up on the movie.

Writer-director Mike Cahill was behind two previous excellent movies that questioned our realties: ANOTHER EARTH (2011) and I ORIGINS (2014). However, this time out his approach is muddled and unstructured. It plays like a philosophical science fiction-romance, but we spend much of the movie trying to determine if the movie is too bizarre or not bizarre enough. A successful complex story will push us to buckle down and engage, but this one never allows us to connect with the characters, so we lose interest. It purposefully tries to trick us into choosing whether it's a computer simulation, parallel universes, or making a statement on severe mental illness. We don't have an answer until the end ... which would be fine were the journey more enticing.

Asteroid mining, synthetic biology, and Isabel's "Brain Box", are given some credence thanks to cameos from Bill Nye (the Science Guy) and Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek. Ms. Hayek and Mr. Wilson, both former Oscar nominees, have little chemistry between them, and the film's best performance, albeit with limited screen time, comes from Nesta Cooper as Greg's daughter. By the end, we realize this was a convoluted story line for what was really a pretty simple explanation, and somehow we feel a bit cheated with the whole thing.

Streaming on Amazon Prime beginning February 5, 2021.
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7/10
Interesting story about addiction.
deloudelouvain25 July 2021
Well, I liked this movie. It's special. Not really a sci-fi movie, even though the drug hallucinations made it look futuristic. It's more a drama about addiction, about loss, about coping with pain, by escaping reality through drugs. The story is intriguing to follow in the beginning, you wonder what's happening, but I figured out the mystery pretty quickly but even then it was pleasant and entertaining to follow. Salma Hayek and Owen Wilson are maybe not the best actors ever but they have a certain something that is pleasant to follow. Owen Wilson was not always convincing, but on the other hand sometimes he was very convincing. My wife scored the movie a seven, I scored it an eight, but my wife is always right so a seven it is...;-)
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1/10
Waste of time
Geeman117 February 2024
Terrible acting by Owen Wilson as he in my opinion cannot pull off a serious roll. Selma Hayek's character comes out of nowhere and makes zero sense. Storyline is nonsense. My wife and I spent the whole movie asking eachother questions as we tried to make some sense of the direction the movie was taking. This was all due to the lack of any plot line. The movie starts out showing a man detached from reality. Is it truly the beginning or just a manifestation he is having. Nothing gets explained even at the end. We are left to form our own opinions. This reminded us allot of the movie Shuttered Island. Cannot say I'd recommend this one.
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7/10
Surprise how many people are not getting it.
pablo-gonzalez-102-3767439 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I must tag along with other reviewers that are calling attention for the low rating of this movie. This is a great movie, whose average rating should be around 7.2/ 7.4. It's unfortunate that even so-called experts critics are not getting it. There is no science fiction at all...!! so stop complaining about the complexities of not understanding which world is real, and which is not, and whether there any scientific basis for Isabel convoluted explanations. It's a simple but artistically filmed story of one man who becomes an addict (there is no need to go for that story, but be sure his mind has not been in a good place for some long time). That man has found a woman with her own mental and addiction issues, who also happens to have a more lively imagination and stronger personality. Estranged from their families, they struggle, and find solace in tripping and escaping to an orderly, peaceful, beautiful place, which they called and would love to be the real world; the addict alternate reality. The trick is that once you realize that they are both creating their own world, you have the director permission to imagine what is the reality behind all of this, including what might really happened when they use their so-called superpowers. Lovely finish; one that many who had similar family struggles can relate to, while others may be living with the hope for, at least, a late arrival of their own flowers.
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4/10
The film is a mess
ScoobySnacks6616 February 2021
Narratively meanders all over the place. What should have been a compelling concept is largely lost with the lack of chemistry between the leads and a hokey and confusing plot. I tried to find the inspiration in this film but I got tired of waiting for it between all the allegorical references of "is this about mental illness?", "is this about simulation theory?",etc.. Have your phone handy to scroll the 'gram while you watch as you may find something a little more compelling there.
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10/10
RIP Jason K.
sxsxndnf26 February 2021
On the morning November 26th, 2019, my parents found their son, and my youngest brother dead to his addiction to "bliss."

To be clear; I didn't want to watch this film. I'm glad I did. My brother was an alcoholic and a drug addict for the better part of 13 years, starting not long after he graduated high school. He had long a beautiful seasons of sobriety during this time. But most of these years were ruled fraught with relapse, jail, court, broken hearts, and cautiously optimistic hope.

In his last trip into the land of bliss, not long before his death, meth had truly taken him to different worlds, though I must say here that none of them struck me as anything more than a nightmare.

I'm not sure that the world Jason sought looked like the one in this movie, but I know he first traveled there to escape the pain he felt deep inside. Loss of child hood friends, contemplating his own identity as an adopted son (With us from birth mind you), and the battle in his own mind as a baby carried to term by a drug addict herself.

Along with my tribute, I'll add that I'm grateful to have seen a glimpse of what his world might have been like. It was terrible and helpful. This movie is unsettling every step of the way if you love someone who is or was battling an addiction. You'll probably only watch this once, or maybe never. But there is no doubting that it was a worthy venture to tell a difficult story that resembles the lives of those trapped by drugs and maybe even more importantly, us who live as ghosts in the lives of those we love. Sorry to anyone else who knows this pain.

Love you. Miss you. D.
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7/10
Not bad, at all.
marlyne-772016 February 2021
There are a few places where pacing takes you off your feet, but the idea behind the movie and its execution are really great.

It's easy to guess why so many people are having problems with the movie - if you never seen homelessness or drug abusers, or perhaps hate them, this movie is definitely not for you.

Great play by phenomenal actors, brilliant and surprising scenery at times. Solid 7/10

The score might have been a bit lower if it wasn't for the throve of absolute trash of films coming out during the pandemic, which set the bar so low I was genuinely happy to spend time watching Bliss.
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2/10
Bliss?? More like "Miss"
HonestCritic20215 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
As other reviews have pointed out, the trailer is misleading. This is not a sci-fi film. This movie is an allegory on drug addiction and mental illness. It is clear from the very beginning, that Greg has a drug addiction. Before going into Bjorn's(his boss) office he crushes his medication and whips out a credit card, to snort off screen. As he is being fired, he's stoned out of his mind. When reality comes crashing down, Greg has a psychotic break. This is the point of the story where the narrator becomes unreliable. Isabel is not a real person. She is the literal representation of the drugs that Greg is addicted to. The sci-fi elements are all in his mind. It was well acted. 👏 for Owen Wilson and Selma Hayek. Their performances were outstanding.
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