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Equilibrium (film)

Equilibrium is a 2002 American science fiction[4] dystopian action film written and directed by Kurt Wimmer, and starring Christian Bale, Emily Watson, and Taye Diggs. Miramax Films released Equilibrium on December 6, 2002, and it grossed $5.3 million on a budget of $20 million.

Equilibrium
Theatrical release poster
Directed byKurt Wimmer
Written byKurt Wimmer
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyDion Beebe
Edited by
Music byKlaus Badelt
Production
companies
Distributed byMiramax Films
Release date
  • December 6, 2002 (2002-12-06)
Running time
107 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$20 million[2]
Box office$5.3 million[3]

The film follows John Preston (Christian Bale), an enforcement officer in a future in which feelings and artistic expression are outlawed and citizens take daily injections of powerful psychoactive drugs to suppress their emotions. After accidentally missing a dose, Preston begins to experience emotions, which makes him question his morality and moderate his actions while attempting to remain undetected by the suspicious society in which he lives. Ultimately, he aids a resistance movement using advanced martial arts, which he was taught by the regime he is helping to overthrow.

Plot edit

Libria, a totalitarian city-state established by survivors of World War III, blames human emotion as the cause for the war. Any activity or object that stimulates emotion is strictly forbidden. Those in violation are labelled "Sense Offenders" and sentenced to death. The population is forced to take a daily injection of "Prozium II" to suppress emotion. Libria is governed by the Tetragrammaton Council, led by "Father", who communicates propaganda through giant video screens throughout the city. At the pinnacle of law enforcement are the Grammaton Clerics, trained in the martial art of gun kata. Clerics frequently raid homes to search for and destroy illegal materials – art, literature and music – executing violators on the spot. A resistance movement, known as the "Underground", emerges to topple Father and the Tetragrammaton Council.

 
The flag of Libria. The four Ts on the flag represent the Tetragrammaton Council.

In 2072, John Preston is a high-ranking Cleric whose wife, Viviana, was executed as a Sense Offender, leaving him as a single father of two. Following a raid, Preston notices that his partner, Errol Partridge, saves a book of poems by W. B. Yeats instead of turning it in for incineration. He follows Partridge to the Nether – a term for regions outside the city – and finds him reading the book. After seeing Preston, Partridge says that he gladly pays the heavy price of feeling emotion; Preston executes him as Partridge slowly reaches for his gun.

Preston accidentally breaks his morning vial of Prozium II, and plans to get a replacement later, but the factory he goes to is temporarily closed due to trouble caused by the Underground. Preston has to leave shortly after he finds the factory is closed, and experiences brief episodes of emotion. He then intentionally skips further doses, hiding them behind the mirror in his bathroom. Partridge is replaced with an ambitious, career-conscious Andrew Brandt, who expresses admiration for Preston's "uncompromising" work as a Cleric. On a raid, they arrest a Sense Offender, Mary O'Brien. To Brandt's surprise, Preston prevents him from executing O'Brien, saying she should be kept alive for interrogation. Brandt grows suspicious of Preston's hesitation. On a different raid, a large following of the Underground is found in a group of buildings, and Preston decides to take a risk by leading the Underground members out of the building. He accidentally leads them into a room where Brandt and other exterminators are waiting. The Underground members are lined up against the wall. Preston stalls for time by offering Brandt the honor of killing the offenders, and switches their guns so that Brandt is using Preston's, and Preston has Brandt's. The Underground members are killed on the spot. On another raid, loud dogs are discovered in a pen, kept by members of the Underground. Exterminators enter the pen and begin shooting the dogs, and Preston flinches a bit each time one is killed. One of the dogs tries to escape, and Preston grabs it before it gets away. Brandt tells him to throw it back into the pen to be killed, but Preston tells him the dog should be tested for disease, as an outbreak in the Nether would be serious. Brandt lets him leave with the dog, but is still suspicious of him.

Later, Preston tries to smuggle the dog out into the Nether by hiding it in his car trunk. He takes the dog out of the trunk, but the dog whines and doesn't leave. He puts the dog back in the trunk and gives it his coat for warmth. Suddenly, officers patrolling the Underground arrive. Preston quickly closes the trunk. The lead officer doesn't recognize Preston (it's dark out) and asks Preston for his badge for verification. Preston realizes his badge is in his coat, which he can't get, because of the dog. He instead says he doesn't have his coat on him. The officer asks for the keys to the trunk, and Preston reluctantly hands them over. The trunk opens, and the dog barks. The officers and patrol quickly turn on Preston, and Preston kills them using Brandt's gun.

Preston begins to feel remorse for killing Partridge and develops an emotional relationship with O'Brien. He uncovers clues that lead to meeting Jurgen, leader of the Underground. Jurgen is planning to disrupt Prozium production to spark a populist uprising and convinces Preston that Father must be assassinated. Vice-Counsel DuPont meets with Preston to reveal that there is a traitor in the upper ranks of the Clerics. Although DuPont initially suspects it is Preston, he assigns him the task of unmasking the traitor. Relieved, Preston accepts and promises to locate the Underground's leadership.

Meanwhile, O'Brien is set to be executed, and Jurgen advises against interfering, believing that it could sabotage plans for the revolution. Preston attempts to stop the execution and fails. Unable to bear her death, he has an emotional breakdown and is arrested by Brandt, who brings him before DuPont. Preston tricks DuPont into believing that Brandt is the traitor by saying the officers and patrol in the Underground were killed by Brandt. Following Brandt's arrest, Preston is told that his home will be searched as a formality. He rushes home to destroy the hidden vials only to discover that his son, who had stopped taking Prozium after his mother died, already has.

Jurgen tells Preston to capture the leaders of the resistance to regain government trust, hoping it will get Preston close enough to assassinate Father. Preston does and is granted an exclusive audience with Father, only to discover that Brandt was not arrested; it was part of a ruse to expose Preston and the Underground. DuPont reveals that he is Father, having secretly replaced the late original Father, and that his cabal does not take Prozium. He taunts Preston, asking how it felt to betray the Underground. Enraged, Preston fights his way through an army of bodyguards to DuPont's office, confronting and killing Brandt in a katana battle. DuPont and Preston engage in a gun kata showdown. Preston wins as DuPont pleads for his life asking, "Is it really worth the price?" Paying homage to Partridge's last words, he responds, "I pay it gladly" and kills DuPont. He destroys the command center that broadcasts Father propaganda. The Underground destroys Prozium manufacturing plants, signaling the beginning of the revolution.

Cast edit

  1. ^ a b Alexa Summer and Maria Pia Calzone portray the same character in the film, but appear in the credits separately as "Viviana Preston" and "Preston's wife" respectively.

Gun kata edit

Angus Macfadyen's character, Vice-Counsel DuPont, describes the fictional fighting style gun kata in the film:

Through analysis of thousands of recorded gunfights, the Cleric has determined that the geometric distribution of antagonists in any gun battle is a statistically-predictable element. The gun kata treats the gun as a total weapon, each fluid position representing a maximum kill zone, inflicting maximum damage on the maximum number of opponents, while keeping the defender clear of the statistically-traditional trajectories of return fire. By the rote mastery of this art, your firing efficiency will rise by no less than 120 percent. The difference of a 63 percent increased lethal proficiency makes the master of the gun katas an adversary not to be taken lightly.

Kata (型, かた) is a Japanese word for standard forms of movements and postures in karate, jujutsu, aikido, and many other traditional martial arts.[5] The gun kata shown in Equilibrium is a hybrid of Wimmer's own style of gun kata (invented in his backyard)[6]

Production edit

 
Olympic Stadium in Berlin, representing Librian government offices
 
The Hall of Enforcement in Equilibrium, represented by the Bundestag (Berlin U-Bahn) subway station under the Reichstag building

Initially announced in 1999 under the title of Librium, the film was produced by Jan de Bont's production company, Blue Tulip Productions, with most of the budget secured in a Dutch tax incentive deal thanks to de Bont's Dutch citizenship.[7] Emily Watson was cast in May 2000,[8] with Christian Bale cast the following month in June of that year.[9]

Filming began on October 19, 2000 and ended on December 10, 2000. Most of the filming used locations in Berlin, due to its unique mixture of fascist and modern architecture. According to the visual effects supervisor Tim McGovern, who worked alongside Wimmer, the fascist architecture was chosen "to make the individual feel small and insignificant so the government seems more powerful". The modern architecture of Berlin emphasizes the futuristic and stolid appearance of the city-state of Libria. Thick walls are represented by an abandoned East German military base, while the exterior of the city, where many of the surviving rebels reside, was filmed in decrepit neighborhoods of East Germany. In addition to the geographic location, a few European art directors also made substantial contributions to the production.[10]

Equilibrium's locations include:[10]

Although making a science fiction movie, Wimmer intentionally avoided using futuristic technology that could become obsolete, and he also decided to set his story in an indeterminate future. "I wanted to create more of an alternate reality than get caught up in the gadgetry of science fiction," he explained. "In fact, there's no technology in Equilibrium that doesn't already exist. It's more like a parallel universe, the perfect setting for a parable."[10]

Reception edit

Critical response edit

The review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes reports that 40% of 90 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 4.8/10. The site's consensus states: "Equilibrium is a reheated mishmash of other sci-fi movies."[12] Metacritic gave the film a score of 33 out of 100, based on reviews from 22 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[13] Elvis Mitchell of The New York Times dismissed Equilibrium for having heavily borrowed from Fahrenheit 451, Nineteen Eighty-Four, Brave New World and other science fiction classics.[14] Roger Ebert awarded the film three stars out of four, noting that: "Equilibrium would be a mindless action picture, except that it has a mind. It doesn't do a lot of deep thinking, but unlike many futuristic combos of sf and f/x, it does make a statement."[15]

Wimmer said in a Dreamwatch interview that "the paying customers seemed to get it", and said the critics "didn't seem to see that the film had a different message than" Fahrenheit 451 or 1984.[16] Responding to the critics' views, Wimmer later said, "Why would I make a movie for someone I wouldn't want to hang out with? Have you ever met a critic who you wanted to party with? I haven't."[17]

Box office edit

The film had an estimated production budget of $20 million. International pre-release sales had already made a profit, so the studio reduced the film's promotion and advertising budget to avoid the risk of the film losing money; as a consequence, theatrical release was limited.[17]

The film was shown in only 301 theaters at its widest release in the United States, earning $541,512 in its opening week, and only $1.2 million when it closed on December 26, 2002; the film earned $4.1 million internationally, for a total of $5.3 million worldwide.[3]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "EQUILIBRIUM (15)". British Board of Film Classification. November 25, 2002. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
  2. ^ Equilibrium (budget), The Numbers. Retrieved March 22, 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Equilibrium (box-office performance)]". The Numbers. Retrieved March 22, 2015.
  4. ^ "Equilibrium (2002)". AllMovie. from the original on January 18, 2021. Retrieved July 17, 2022.
  5. ^ Cynarski, Wojciech J., and Joanna Skowron. "An analysis of the conceptual language used for the general theory of martial arts–Japanese, Polish and English terminology". Ido Movement for Culture. Journal of Martial Arts Anthropology.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ . Equilibriumfans.com. Archived from the original on November 22, 2010. Retrieved March 29, 2009.
  7. ^ "Almodovar, Tulip write UA's 'Paper'". Variety. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  8. ^ "Watson joins Diggs in sci-fi 'Librium'". Variety. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  9. ^ "Bale finds his 'Librium'". Variety. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  10. ^ a b c "Equilibrium Production Notes". compleatseanbean.com. Retrieved March 28, 2014.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on March 22, 2012. Retrieved July 23, 2011.
  12. ^ "Equilibrium - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 8, 2008.
  13. ^ "Equilibrium (2002): Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved January 8, 2008.
  14. ^ Mitchell, Elvis (December 6, 2002). "Equilibrium (2002) Film Review". The New York Times. Retrieved September 19, 2010.
  15. ^ Ebert, Roger (December 6, 2002). "Equilibrium". Chicago Sun-Times.
  16. ^ . Dreamwatch. Winter 2003. Archived from the original on August 9, 2017. Retrieved May 30, 2011.
  17. ^ a b Snider, John C. . SciFiDimensions.com. Sci-Fi Dimensions. Archived from the original on June 21, 2003. Retrieved February 1, 2017.

External links edit

equilibrium, film, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, equilibrium, film, news, newspapers, books, schol. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Equilibrium film news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Equilibrium is a 2002 American science fiction 4 dystopian action film written and directed by Kurt Wimmer and starring Christian Bale Emily Watson and Taye Diggs Miramax Films released Equilibrium on December 6 2002 and it grossed 5 3 million on a budget of 20 million EquilibriumTheatrical release posterDirected byKurt WimmerWritten byKurt WimmerProduced byJan de Bont Lucas FosterStarringChristian Bale Emily Watson Taye Diggs Angus Macfadyen Sean Bean Matthew Harbour William FichtnerCinematographyDion BeebeEdited byTom Rolf William YehMusic byKlaus BadeltProductioncompaniesDimension Films Blue Tulip ProductionsDistributed byMiramax FilmsRelease dateDecember 6 2002 2002 12 06 Running time107 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 20 million 2 Box office 5 3 million 3 The film follows John Preston Christian Bale an enforcement officer in a future in which feelings and artistic expression are outlawed and citizens take daily injections of powerful psychoactive drugs to suppress their emotions After accidentally missing a dose Preston begins to experience emotions which makes him question his morality and moderate his actions while attempting to remain undetected by the suspicious society in which he lives Ultimately he aids a resistance movement using advanced martial arts which he was taught by the regime he is helping to overthrow Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Gun kata 4 Production 5 Reception 5 1 Critical response 5 2 Box office 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksPlot editLibria a totalitarian city state established by survivors of World War III blames human emotion as the cause for the war Any activity or object that stimulates emotion is strictly forbidden Those in violation are labelled Sense Offenders and sentenced to death The population is forced to take a daily injection of Prozium II to suppress emotion Libria is governed by the Tetragrammaton Council led by Father who communicates propaganda through giant video screens throughout the city At the pinnacle of law enforcement are the Grammaton Clerics trained in the martial art of gun kata Clerics frequently raid homes to search for and destroy illegal materials art literature and music executing violators on the spot A resistance movement known as the Underground emerges to topple Father and the Tetragrammaton Council nbsp The flag of Libria The four Ts on the flag represent the Tetragrammaton Council In 2072 John Preston is a high ranking Cleric whose wife Viviana was executed as a Sense Offender leaving him as a single father of two Following a raid Preston notices that his partner Errol Partridge saves a book of poems by W B Yeats instead of turning it in for incineration He follows Partridge to the Nether a term for regions outside the city and finds him reading the book After seeing Preston Partridge says that he gladly pays the heavy price of feeling emotion Preston executes him as Partridge slowly reaches for his gun Preston accidentally breaks his morning vial of Prozium II and plans to get a replacement later but the factory he goes to is temporarily closed due to trouble caused by the Underground Preston has to leave shortly after he finds the factory is closed and experiences brief episodes of emotion He then intentionally skips further doses hiding them behind the mirror in his bathroom Partridge is replaced with an ambitious career conscious Andrew Brandt who expresses admiration for Preston s uncompromising work as a Cleric On a raid they arrest a Sense Offender Mary O Brien To Brandt s surprise Preston prevents him from executing O Brien saying she should be kept alive for interrogation Brandt grows suspicious of Preston s hesitation On a different raid a large following of the Underground is found in a group of buildings and Preston decides to take a risk by leading the Underground members out of the building He accidentally leads them into a room where Brandt and other exterminators are waiting The Underground members are lined up against the wall Preston stalls for time by offering Brandt the honor of killing the offenders and switches their guns so that Brandt is using Preston s and Preston has Brandt s The Underground members are killed on the spot On another raid loud dogs are discovered in a pen kept by members of the Underground Exterminators enter the pen and begin shooting the dogs and Preston flinches a bit each time one is killed One of the dogs tries to escape and Preston grabs it before it gets away Brandt tells him to throw it back into the pen to be killed but Preston tells him the dog should be tested for disease as an outbreak in the Nether would be serious Brandt lets him leave with the dog but is still suspicious of him Later Preston tries to smuggle the dog out into the Nether by hiding it in his car trunk He takes the dog out of the trunk but the dog whines and doesn t leave He puts the dog back in the trunk and gives it his coat for warmth Suddenly officers patrolling the Underground arrive Preston quickly closes the trunk The lead officer doesn t recognize Preston it s dark out and asks Preston for his badge for verification Preston realizes his badge is in his coat which he can t get because of the dog He instead says he doesn t have his coat on him The officer asks for the keys to the trunk and Preston reluctantly hands them over The trunk opens and the dog barks The officers and patrol quickly turn on Preston and Preston kills them using Brandt s gun Preston begins to feel remorse for killing Partridge and develops an emotional relationship with O Brien He uncovers clues that lead to meeting Jurgen leader of the Underground Jurgen is planning to disrupt Prozium production to spark a populist uprising and convinces Preston that Father must be assassinated Vice Counsel DuPont meets with Preston to reveal that there is a traitor in the upper ranks of the Clerics Although DuPont initially suspects it is Preston he assigns him the task of unmasking the traitor Relieved Preston accepts and promises to locate the Underground s leadership Meanwhile O Brien is set to be executed and Jurgen advises against interfering believing that it could sabotage plans for the revolution Preston attempts to stop the execution and fails Unable to bear her death he has an emotional breakdown and is arrested by Brandt who brings him before DuPont Preston tricks DuPont into believing that Brandt is the traitor by saying the officers and patrol in the Underground were killed by Brandt Following Brandt s arrest Preston is told that his home will be searched as a formality He rushes home to destroy the hidden vials only to discover that his son who had stopped taking Prozium after his mother died already has Jurgen tells Preston to capture the leaders of the resistance to regain government trust hoping it will get Preston close enough to assassinate Father Preston does and is granted an exclusive audience with Father only to discover that Brandt was not arrested it was part of a ruse to expose Preston and the Underground DuPont reveals that he is Father having secretly replaced the late original Father and that his cabal does not take Prozium He taunts Preston asking how it felt to betray the Underground Enraged Preston fights his way through an army of bodyguards to DuPont s office confronting and killing Brandt in a katana battle DuPont and Preston engage in a gun kata showdown Preston wins as DuPont pleads for his life asking Is it really worth the price Paying homage to Partridge s last words he responds I pay it gladly and kills DuPont He destroys the command center that broadcasts Father propaganda The Underground destroys Prozium manufacturing plants signaling the beginning of the revolution Cast editChristian Bale as John Preston Emily Watson as Mary O Brien Taye Diggs as Andrew Brandt Angus Macfadyen as Vice Counsel DuPont Sean Bean as Errol Partridge Matthew Harbour as Robbie Preston William Fichtner as Jurgen Sean Pertwee as Father David Hemmings as Proctor Emily Siewert as Lisa Preston Alexa Summer as Viviana Preston VP 1 Maria Pia Calzone as Preston s Wife VP 1 Dominic Purcell as Seamus Brian Conley as Reading Room Overseer Kurt Wimmer cameo as Rebel Victim a b Alexa Summer and Maria Pia Calzone portray the same character in the film but appear in the credits separately as Viviana Preston and Preston s wife respectively Gun kata editSee also Gun fu Angus Macfadyen s character Vice Counsel DuPont describes the fictional fighting style gun kata in the film Through analysis of thousands of recorded gunfights the Cleric has determined that the geometric distribution of antagonists in any gun battle is a statistically predictable element The gun kata treats the gun as a total weapon each fluid position representing a maximum kill zone inflicting maximum damage on the maximum number of opponents while keeping the defender clear of the statistically traditional trajectories of return fire By the rote mastery of this art your firing efficiency will rise by no less than 120 percent The difference of a 63 percent increased lethal proficiency makes the master of the gun katas an adversary not to be taken lightly Kata 型 かた is a Japanese word for standard forms of movements and postures in karate jujutsu aikido and many other traditional martial arts 5 The gun kata shown in Equilibrium is a hybrid of Wimmer s own style of gun kata invented in his backyard 6 Production edit nbsp Olympic Stadium in Berlin representing Librian government offices nbsp The Hall of Enforcement in Equilibrium represented by the Bundestag Berlin U Bahn subway station under the Reichstag buildingInitially announced in 1999 under the title of Librium the film was produced by Jan de Bont s production company Blue Tulip Productions with most of the budget secured in a Dutch tax incentive deal thanks to de Bont s Dutch citizenship 7 Emily Watson was cast in May 2000 8 with Christian Bale cast the following month in June of that year 9 Filming began on October 19 2000 and ended on December 10 2000 Most of the filming used locations in Berlin due to its unique mixture of fascist and modern architecture According to the visual effects supervisor Tim McGovern who worked alongside Wimmer the fascist architecture was chosen to make the individual feel small and insignificant so the government seems more powerful The modern architecture of Berlin emphasizes the futuristic and stolid appearance of the city state of Libria Thick walls are represented by an abandoned East German military base while the exterior of the city where many of the surviving rebels reside was filmed in decrepit neighborhoods of East Germany In addition to the geographic location a few European art directors also made substantial contributions to the production 10 Equilibrium s locations include 10 Olympic Stadium Berlin built for the 1936 Summer Olympics Deutschlandhalle also built for the 1936 Summer Olympics Brandenburg Gate in Berlin Berlin Tempelhof Airport construction of which was begun before the Nazi era but which was completed during World War II and displays characteristics of the Nazis architectural style Bundestag Berlin U Bahn station a modern subway station near the new Reichstag building along with long tunnels of the Berlin U Bahn underground railway At the time the film was made the Bundestag station was unopened but in 2009 it went into service Decrepit East German neighborhoods as well as an abandoned massive former GDR military base which The EUR district in Rome Italy built during the fascist rule of Benito Mussolini 11 Although making a science fiction movie Wimmer intentionally avoided using futuristic technology that could become obsolete and he also decided to set his story in an indeterminate future I wanted to create more of an alternate reality than get caught up in the gadgetry of science fiction he explained In fact there s no technology in Equilibrium that doesn t already exist It s more like a parallel universe the perfect setting for a parable 10 Reception editCritical response edit The review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes reports that 40 of 90 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review the average rating is 4 8 10 The site s consensus states Equilibrium is a reheated mishmash of other sci fi movies 12 Metacritic gave the film a score of 33 out of 100 based on reviews from 22 critics indicating generally unfavorable reviews 13 Elvis Mitchell of The New York Times dismissed Equilibrium for having heavily borrowed from Fahrenheit 451 Nineteen Eighty Four Brave New World and other science fiction classics 14 Roger Ebert awarded the film three stars out of four noting that Equilibrium would be a mindless action picture except that it has a mind It doesn t do a lot of deep thinking but unlike many futuristic combos of sf and f x it does make a statement 15 Wimmer said in a Dreamwatch interview that the paying customers seemed to get it and said the critics didn t seem to see that the film had a different message than Fahrenheit 451 or 1984 16 Responding to the critics views Wimmer later said Why would I make a movie for someone I wouldn t want to hang out with Have you ever met a critic who you wanted to party with I haven t 17 Box office edit The film had an estimated production budget of 20 million International pre release sales had already made a profit so the studio reduced the film s promotion and advertising budget to avoid the risk of the film losing money as a consequence theatrical release was limited 17 The film was shown in only 301 theaters at its widest release in the United States earning 541 512 in its opening week and only 1 2 million when it closed on December 26 2002 the film earned 4 1 million internationally for a total of 5 3 million worldwide 3 See also editEquals film List of dystopian films List of films featuring surveillance List of films set in the futureReferences edit EQUILIBRIUM 15 British Board of Film Classification November 25 2002 Retrieved November 17 2014 Equilibrium budget The Numbers Retrieved March 22 2015 a b Equilibrium box office performance The Numbers Retrieved March 22 2015 Equilibrium 2002 AllMovie Archived from the original on January 18 2021 Retrieved July 17 2022 Cynarski Wojciech J and Joanna Skowron An analysis of the conceptual language used for the general theory of martial arts Japanese Polish and English terminology Ido Movement for Culture Journal of Martial Arts Anthropology a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Equilibrium DVD Commentary Kurt Wimmer Chapter 7 Equilibriumfans com Archived from the original on November 22 2010 Retrieved March 29 2009 Almodovar Tulip write UA s Paper Variety Retrieved September 27 2021 Watson joins Diggs in sci fi Librium Variety Retrieved September 27 2021 Bale finds his Librium Variety Retrieved September 27 2021 a b c Equilibrium Production Notes compleatseanbean com Retrieved March 28 2014 Equilibrium DVD Commentary Wimmer amp Foster Chapter 2 Archived from the original on March 22 2012 Retrieved July 23 2011 Equilibrium Rotten Tomatoes Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved January 8 2008 Equilibrium 2002 Reviews Metacritic Retrieved January 8 2008 Mitchell Elvis December 6 2002 Equilibrium 2002 Film Review The New York Times Retrieved September 19 2010 Ebert Roger December 6 2002 Equilibrium Chicago Sun Times Dreamwatch Interview Kurt Wimmer Achieving Equilibrium Dreamwatch Winter 2003 Archived from the original on August 9 2017 Retrieved May 30 2011 a b Snider John C Interview Kurt Wimmer Writer Director Equilibrium SciFiDimensions com Sci Fi Dimensions Archived from the original on June 21 2003 Retrieved February 1 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Equilibrium Equilibrium at IMDb Equilibrium at Box Office Mojo Equilibrium at Rotten Tomatoes Equilibrium at Metacritic nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Equilibrium film amp oldid 1183414385, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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