Savages (2012 film)

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Savages
File:Savages poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Oliver Stone
Produced by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Screenplay by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Based on Savages by Don Winslow
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by Adam Peters
Cinematography Dan Mindel
Edited by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Production
company
Relativity Media
Ixtlan Productions
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release dates
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  • July 6, 2012 (2012-07-06)
Running time
130 minutes[1]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $45 million[2]
Box office $83 million[3]

Savages is a 2012 American crime thriller film directed by Oliver Stone. It is based on the novel of the same name by Don Winslow. The screenplay was written by Shane Salerno, Stone, and Winslow. The film was released on July 6, 2012, and stars Taylor Kitsch, Blake Lively, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Demian Bichir, Benicio del Toro, Salma Hayek, John Travolta, and Emile Hirsch.[4]

Plot

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Best friends Chon (Taylor Kitsch) and Ben (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) are marijuana growers living in Laguna Beach, California. Chon, a former Navy SEAL, smuggled the seeds for the plants out of Afghanistan. Ben, a graduate of University of California, Berkeley in business and botany, cultivates the product. The seeds yield a particularly potent strain of marijuana that soon developes a wide customer base and makes Chon and Ben very wealthy, and Ben devotes time and money to doing charity work in Africa and Asia. They are both in a relationship with Ophelia Sage (Blake Lively).

The trio receive a video from Mexican drug cartel enforcer Miguel "Lado" Arroyo (Benicio del Toro). The video shows several severed heads and a chainsaw, and Arroyo demands a meeting. The cartel offers a partnership. Chon and Ben offer to hand over their network and get out of the business, but the cartel wants their expertise and insists on a partnership. Chon and Ben make plans with Ophelia to leave and go to Indonesia for a year, not telling her they are fleeing from the cartel. Chon and Ben speak to corrupt DEA agent Dennis Cain (John Travolta), who urges them to partner with the cartel. Ophelia is kidnapped by Lado's crew. Chon and Ben are notified of Ophelia's kidnapping via a video call from cartel leader Elena Sánchez (Salma Hayek), who threatens to harm Ophelia if Chon and Ben resist the partnership.

Chon and Ben speak with Dennis about the situation. Dennis informs them that Elena is facing the loss of her political connections in Mexico, foiling her efforts to move into the US. She has already lost almost her entire family, and Dennis has nothing on her that can help them. Chon stabs Dennis in the hand and demands that Dennis provide DEA intelligence so they can retaliate against Elena. With help from Chon's Navy SEAL friends, the duo attack a cartel money convoy, killing seven of Elena's men.

Ophelia is being kept in horrible living conditions and demands to speak to whoever is in charge. Lado drugs and rapes Ophelia as revenge for going over his head. Elena travels to the US to visit her daughter and to deal with the escalating situation; she has Ophelia brought with her. Chon and Ben decide to frame Alex (Demián Bichir), a high-ranking member of the cartel, as an agent of Elena's rival El Azul. With help from Dennis, they falsify the evidence and give it to Lado. Lado tortures Alex and forces Ben to immolate him; Ophelia is forced to watch. Lado decides to double-cross Elena and begin working with El Azul.

Ben and Chon pay Dennis $3 million for information on Elena's daughter, Magda (Sandra Echeverria), and the name of his snitch in Elena's cartel. After kidnapping Magda, Ben and Chon video call Elena, establishing that they are now in control. With Elena at their mercy, they arrange a meeting to exchange Ophelia and Magda. The exchange will take place in the desert with snipers from both sides in position. Elena asks for the identity of the man who revealed her daughter's location. Chon reveals that it was Lado. Elena attempts to kill Lado, but he shoots her first. An intense firefight erupts. Chon is shot several times. Lado is shot in the back by Ben, but Lado shoots Ben in the neck before being killed by Ophelia. With Ben mortally wounded, Chon injects Ben, Ophelia, and himself with a fatal overdose, so they can die together.

The foregoing is revealed as a nightmare experienced by Ophelia. At the actual meeting, Lado steals Elena's car and escapes as Dennis leads DEA agents to the scene. Everyone except Lado and Magda is arrested. Because Ben possesses incriminating information about Dennis, Dennis names Ben and Chon as his informants within the cartel, and they are released. Elena is sentenced to thirty years in prison, and El Azul and Lado create a new cartel called "The Azulados". Ben, Chon, and Ophelia leave the country. They live in a hut by a beach, possibly in Indonesia. Ophelia wonders if they're living like savages.

Cast

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Production

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"We had two weeks rehearsal, so we talked about it until we were about to pass out. I think I had known Blake for three or four days, before we shot [those scenes]. That was the first week of shooting. It was just about trusting Blake and Oliver, like you do on any set. I was just glad it was over with, to be honest. It's very awkward to do. It's such a big part of Chon and who he is. That's how you meet him, so it's a pretty intense reveal, no pun intended. It's all part of it, but I was glad it was in the first week."

— Kitsch on shooting the sex scenes[5]

By August 2011, the film was shooting in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles.[4] The Los Angeles Times reported: "The estate's indoor pool was converted into a massive hydroponic marijuana farm for the film's production, with about 300 high-octane pot plants jamming the covert nursery."[6] Production designer Tomas Voth, said: "I wanted to use real plants and had them all ready to go, but it was some legal thing. Universal told us to use fakes."[6] The sex scenes were filmed during the first three days.[7] The film entered post-production in October 2011.

Casting

Jennifer Lawrence was originally cast as Ophelia but dropped out due to scheduling conflicts.[8] Other actresses considered to replace Lawrence included Amber Heard, Olivia Wilde, Teresa Palmer, and Abbie Cornish.[9] In April 2011, it was reported that Blake Lively had been cast as Ophelia.[10] Before casting Taylor Kitsch in the film, Oliver Stone asked director Peter Berg to show him 30 minutes of Kitsch's work in Battleship to see how he was as a leading man, and after seeing that footage, he cast him.[11] Trevor Donovan originally auditioned for a role that was cut but after seeing Donovan's tape, Stone specifically wrote him a part that was not in the book.[12] Uma Thurman played Ophelia's mother, Paqu, but her scenes were cut due to time constraints.[13]

Reception

Critical reception

File:Savages premiere Westwood June 2012.jpg
The red-carpet premiere at Fox Village Theater on June 25, 2012.

Savages received mixed reviews from critics. Based on 182 reviews collected by aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes, the film scored a 51% approval rating, with an average rating of 5.7/10. The site's critical consensus is, "It's undeniably messy, but Savages finds Oliver Stone returning to dark, fearlessly lurid form."[14] Metacritic, another review aggregator which assigns a weighted mean rating in the 0–100 range based on reviews from top mainstream critics, calculated an average score of 59, based on 41 reviews, which indicates "Mixed or average reviews".[15]

The film was somewhat better received in Europe. UK film and music journalist Dylan B Jones praised it, claiming director Oliver Stone had found "a magic strain of sultry sex, frantically emotional turmoil and glossily savvy action sequences".

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film three and a half stars (out of four) and praised Oliver Stone's direction, saying, "Much of the fascination of 'Savages' comes through Stone's treatment of the negotiations, which involve percentages, sliding scales over three years, an ultimate payout, and other financial details that drugs have in common with big business. It's spellbinding to watch the two sides trying to outthink each other."

HitFix's film critic Drew McWeeny gave the film an A- and called it "one of the most complete pleasures for me this summer". He was in general positive of the actors' performances; he described Lively's work as "smart and sad precisely because she plays O as such a broken, needy little soul" and praised the bond between Kitsch and Taylor-Johnson which "seems not only credible but lived in and authentic throughout the film."[16] In comparison, MovieFix's film critic Connor Jason gave the film 2/5, noting that "Savages is a hot mess – beautiful actors and locations mixed with a plot that starts strong but ultimately turns into a snooze-fest. With a lead villain seemingly ripped from the cover of Cosmo magazine, Stone's latest flick savagely disappoints."[17]

The film was nominated at the 2012 ALMA Awards in four categories including "Favorite Movie Actor", "Favorite Movie Actress—Drama/Adventure", "Favorite Movie Actor—Supporting Role", and "Favorite Movie Actress—Supporting Role" for Benicio Del Toro, Salma Hayek, Demián Bichir and Mia Maestro, respectively.[18]

Box office

On its opening weekend, the film ranked fourth at the box-office, earning $16.2 million.[19] As of April 3, 2013, it has grossed $47,382,068 in North America and $35,584,084 in other countries, for a worldwide total of $82,966,152.[3]

Home media

Savages was released on DVD and Blu-ray on November 13, 2012.

References

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External links