Being Human | |
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Directed by | Bill Forsyth |
Written by | Bill Forsyth |
Produced by | Robert F. Colesberry David Puttnam |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Michael Coulter |
Edited by | Michael Ellis |
Music by | Michael Gibbs |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date |
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Running time | 122 minutes |
Countries | United Kingdom Japan |
Languages | English Gaelic Friulian |
Budget | $40 million[1] |
Box office | $5 million[1] |
Being Human is a 1994 comedy-drama film written and directed by Bill Forsyth and starring Robin Williams, John Turturro, Bill Nighy, Vincent D'Onofrio, Robert Carlyle, Theresa Russell and Ewan McGregor in his feature-film debut. An international co-production of the United Kingdom and Japan, the film portrays the experience of a single human soul, portrayed by Williams, through various incarnations. Williams is the only common actor throughout the stories that span man's history on Earth.
An attempt on director-screenwriter Bill Forsyth's part to depict by visual means the ordinariness of life throughout the ages, Being Human is deliberately slow in its pace to emphasize how slow life often is. The structure is one of vignette-like character studies of one man (actually five distinct men, all with the same soul) who keeps making the same relationships and mistakes throughout his lifetimes.