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Schizopolis
Directed by
Steven Soderbergh
Not Rated
1996
1h 39m
Comedy
,
Fantasy
,
and more
6.7
65%
80%
Add to Watchlist
Fletcher Munson, the lethargic employee of a pseudo-religious self help company, and his doppelganger, the friendly but dull dentist Dr. Jeffrey Korchek.
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Where to Watch Schizopolis
Amazon Video
Rent $2.99
Buy $14.99
Apple TV
Rent $3.99
Buy $14.99
Fandango At Home
Rent $2.99
Buy $14.99
+2 more
Cast of Schizopolis
Steven Soderbergh
Fletcher Munson
Scott Allen
Right Hand Man
Betsy Brantley
Mrs. Munson
Marcus Lyle Brown
Corporate Mole
Joe Chrest
Man in Parking Lot
Silas Cooper
The Mysterious Couple
C.C. Courtney
Man Being Interviewed
Sonny Cranch
Pastor
Ann Dalrymple
Secretary
Darrin Dickerson
Photo Store Customer
Andre du Broc
Corporate Drone
Ann Hamilton
Mrs. Schwitters
John Hardy
Talkshow Host
Miles Hardy
Baseball Player
Coleman Hough
(uncredited)
Lori Jefferson
Dental Patient
Eddie Jemison
Nameless Numberhead Man
David Jensen
Elmo Oxygen
Rodger Kamenetz
Cardiologist
Katherine LaNasa
Diane
Margaret Lawhon
TV Newscaster
Mike Malone
T. Azimuth Schwitters
Cristin McAlister
Personal Assistant
Gordon Mese
Debt Collector
John Mese
Depressed Guy
L. Christian Mixon
Bad Guy
Liann Pattison
The Mysterious Couple
Ronnie Stutes
Lawyer
Schizopolis Ratings & Reviews
Nashville Scene
Jason Shawhan
Despite Schizopolis' comedic diversions and periodic self-deconstructions, what sticks out the most about this film is how similar it is to David Lynch's Lost Highway, which was made at the same time.
Dare Daniel
Daniel Barnes
Intensely aware of and yet utterly freed from cinematic conventions of storytelling and style, Schizopolis is like the product of Luis Bunuel and Richard Lester collaborating on a Tex Avery cartoon adapted from a Franz Kafka novel.
Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews
Dennis Schwartz
Though funny and observant at times, it still comes across as a strained juvenile guerilla movie whose bizarre antics never caught fire.
Cinema Writer
Jay Antani
a filmmaking exercise from someone eager to stretch his legs, do something goofy, and experiment, all of which Soderbergh does without losing his audience
Apollo Guide
Dan Jardine
Taken as a whole, the film fails to maintain the consistent absurd tone it is aiming for.
Cinemania
Dan Jardine
At once an astute study of the banality of modern life and a banal student film wrapped around a series of inside jokes.
Filmcritic.com
Chris Barsanti
moderately funny and seriously skewed
New York Times
Janet Maslin
Exasperating as it is, Schizopolis has a deliberateness almost interesting enough to offset its sophomoric streak.
Nick's Flick Picks
Nick Davis
Schizopolis is by no means an epochal event, but it's clever and offbeat, well worth appreciating on its own proper terms.
Boxoffice Magazine
Shlomo Schwartzberg
Schizopolis is Steven Soderbergh's berserk and uneven attempt to mimic Bunuel's Un Chien Andalou; he wants to provoke reaction but he's not quite sure how to go about it.
Los Angeles Times
Kevin Thomas
Schizopolis represents a minor act of self-indulgence on the part of the sometimes eccentric Steven Soderbergh but results in major tedium for the viewer.
San Francisco Chronicle
Mick LaSalle
It's fresh, unexpected and goofy. It's not a smart career move, just a film that its director wanted to make for some crazy reason, and he made it.
Austin Chronicle
Marjorie Baumgarten
Who knew that deep inside the soul of Steven Soderbergh beat the heart of a great comic actor?
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
Jack Garner
No kidding, this is one weird movie. But if you're open to the wacky experience and you are patient, you will have a lot of laughs and gain surprising insight into contemporary society.
Man Who Viewed Too Much
Mike D'Angelo
It's so relentlessly audacious, and veers off in so many totally unexpected directions, that I can't help but reluctantly admire it. If this film were an actor, it'd be Crispin Glover, and parts of it approach the lunatic brilliance of Andy Kaufman.
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