No One Sleeps

Starring:Tom Wlaschiha, Irit Levi, Jim Thalman, Richard Conti, Charles Shaw Robinson, Kalene Parker, Alberto Rosas, Michael Patrick Gaffney, Cody Bayne, Dolores Moloney, Robert Bustamante, Heather Hartmann
Director: Jochen Hick
Studio: Wolfe Video
Product Type: DVD
Editorial Review:
Description
Stephan arrives in San Francisco to prove that the AIDS virus was deliberately introduced into the general population. Before his death, Stephan's father, a medical researcher, identified some of the experimenters and survivors involved. Armed with evidence, Stephan attempts to track them down, only to discover that they are being systematically murdered. No One Sleep is a riveting thriller set against the backdrop of one of the greatest issues of our time.
Average customer rating:
- Nessun dorma
- Unique, intriguing HIV plot, suspensful story
- zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
- Positive On Bearing a Cross
- This is not a movie for shallow people.
|
No One Sleeps
Starring: Tom Wlaschiha , Irit Levi , Jim Thalman , Richard Conti , and Charles Shaw Robinson
Director: Jochen Hick
Manufacturer: Wolfe Video
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
Mystery & Suspense
| By Genre
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Drama
| By Genre
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Germany
| By Country
| Art House & International
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Fatal Attraction
| By Theme
| Mystery & Suspense
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Serial Killers
| By Theme
| Mystery & Suspense
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Mystery & Suspense
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Gay & Lesbian
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
DVDs Under $14.99
| Today's Deals in DVD
| Special Features
| DVD
| Video
( N )
| Titles
| Features
| DVD
| Video
Used DVDs
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
| Action & Adventure
| African American Cinema
| Animation
| Anime & Manga
| Art House & International
| Classics
| Comedy
| Cult Movies
| Documentary
| Drama
| Educational
| Fitness & Yoga
| Gay & Lesbian
| Horror
| Kids & Family
| Military & War
| Music Video & Concerts
| Musicals & Performing Arts
| Mystery & Suspense
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Special Interests
| Sports
| Television
| Westerns
Germany
| European Cinema
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Drama
| By Genre
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Mystery & Suspense
| By Genre
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Erotic
| By Theme
| Foreign & International
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
General
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Drama
| By Genre
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Gay & Lesbian
| By Genre
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Mystery & Suspense
| By Genre
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Similar Items:
- Dante's Cove
- The Conrad Boys
- Chill Out
- In the Flesh
- Adam & Steve (2005)
ASIN: B00005NBA0
Release Date: 2001-10-23 |
Description
Stephan arrives in San Francisco to prove that the AIDS virus was deliberately introduced into the general population. Before his death, Stephan's father, a medical researcher, identified some of the experimenters and survivors involved. Armed with evidence, Stephan attempts to track them down, only to discover that they are being systematically murdered. No One Sleep is a riveting thriller set against the backdrop of one of the greatest issues of our time.
Customer Reviews:
Nessun dorma.......2006-02-20
Jochen Hick wrote and directed this little thriller of a suspense film based on the concept that the AIDS virus was a sheep virus mutated by the government to rid the world of gays and was apparently tested on convicts in the years before the outbreak of the hideous disease. Were it not for the poignancy of the concept of the film, this would fall into the category of the many films about the ruination of the world by a rampant non-prejudicial infective organism.
Stefan (Tom Wlaschiha) journeys from Berlin to San Francisco to investigate his father's scientific suppositions about the induced sheep virus and its effects of the convicts in whom it was infused. He meets with some disdain and resistance to a dead theory, but also encounters some folks who know of the theory and support his investigation. Simultaneously with his visit a series of serial murders takes place, each victim killed in a similar manner and each murder apparently accompanied by strains of music from Puccini's opera 'Turandot' which just happens to be opening at the San Francisco Opera. A police investigator Louise Tolliver (Irit Levi) and her companion cop (Kalene Parker) follow the murders while Stefan makes the rounds of the sex clubs and bars in San Francisco trying to locate men who may have been guinea pigs for his father's theory. He encounters a strange lad Jeffrey (Jim Thalman) with whom he has a cat and mouse attraction and a prominent Doctor Burroughs (Richard Conti) who seems oddly involved in the cast of suspects. How this all come to an end is the play of the film, a story as much about the search for self identity between Stefan and Jeffery as it is a case for investigation of murders.
While Tom Wlaschiha, Jim Thalman and Richard Conti do well with their roles (they are the only three who have any prior acting experience in the film!), the quality of the film sags considerably by the less than acceptable minimally talented Irit Levy and Kaylene Parker: when on screen the credibility of the story drops below zero. There are some small cameos by other actors that brighten the screen for the moments they inhabit, but in all the film is drowned by the incessant replay of 'Nessun dorma' as sung by Mario del Monaco from a recording o the opera - and that seems to be the reason for making the film! Good idea for a film and some good characterizations by the actors, but there is no resolution of the initial premise that started the whole thing. Grady Harp, February 06
Unique, intriguing HIV plot, suspensful story.......2006-01-06
Is the government suppressing information about HIV and AIDS? Is it possible that the AIDS virus originated as a governmental conspiracy, or an accidental result of a failed German experiment? No One Sleeps is one of the most intriguing movies about AIDS ever made. You need to watch it now, and
you need to tell your friends, and their friends, and so on, to watch it.
Stephen moves to San Francisco in search of the truth about AIDS. His father, now dead, left him some incredibly crucial information: a way to find some "lists" of names that prove that the AIDS virus started in a laboratory. Stephen is desperately
trying to complete his research before the people he is looking for die, as many of the long-term survivors of HIV and AIDS are being murdered at a ridiculously fast rate. Not only does he have to take on a murder mystery, but he is also confronted with so many of the problems that so many of the AIDS
activists and researchers face: not only is everyone dying, but a vast majority of the population feels defeated -- defeated by the government, defeated by their friends dying, defeated by the lack of research and money devoted to the catastrophe -- and don't have the energy to fight.
No One Sleeps dives head-on into some of the most serious questions of our time: where did AIDS come from? Was it a government conspiracy against gay people? Was it an accidental result of a failed experiment? Why are SO many people still becoming infected and dying every day--by murder or by disease? Is there any way of ever finding out all the truths? No One Sleeps gives us a glimpse into the life of people (many of them living with HIV and AIDS) devoting their lives to understanding why they, and so many of their friends, are dying. The murder plot is at times confusing, but still, very well done.
An incredibly powerful movie that you absolutely cannot pass up.
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.......2005-05-18
It was a good premise--a German researcher investigates his scientist father's claim of the origin of AIDS, but witnesses he tracks down turn up murdered before he can question them. The urban legend about the U.S. government creating the AIDS virus during biological weapons research could have made for a great paranoid thriller. But this dull, confusing mess never gave it a chance. The script is loaded with lapses of logic and coherence. How is it that the main character is allowed to wander onto crime scenes by the police, for example? The editing is so choppy that you often don't know that the protagonist's motives for his actions are until they're played out. The production is so cheap it looks like it was filmed on skid row. The acting is poor too--in the most intense scenes, the hero looks like he's forgotten a phone number. Also, what's with the repeated references to some Italian opera? To point out the obvious, the government would never use an opera as a basis to conceal evidence. It's infuriating to think of what Alfred Hitchcock could have done with this story. Instead, the most memorable thing about this movie is how misleading it's title is. I stayed awake with effort.
Positive On Bearing a Cross.......2002-05-20
The protagonist of "No One Sleeps" is Stefan Hein (played by Tom Wlaschiha), a doctoral student from a university in Berlin, who visits San Francisco to make a presentation at GGU (presumably Golden Gate University). Stefan presents an old idea, originally taken up by his father, that AIDS came about around 1978 when the US government allegedly tested varieties of sheep viruses on prisoners in return for releasing the prisoners earlier than expected. Although the reception to the presentation was rather impolite, Stefan is determined to spend some time in the City seeing if he can find any more records or people to substantiate the theory.
At the university, Stefan makes three acquaintances. One is a friendly graduate student, Sascha; one is a neurologist, Dr. Richard Burroghs (played by Richard Conti), who says he found Stefan's presentation the best of the day; the third is a bearded hunk, Jeffrey Russo (played by Jim Thalman), who approaches Stefan.
Meanwhile, one dead body has already shown up in a Presidio fortification. Stefan's research led him via an AIDS Project office to a club kid, whose entrance is as a corpse. At both deaths, witnesses heard music from Puccini's last grand opera, "Turandot".
Stefan pokes around. The police poke around. Connections gradually appear between the characters. Some people hum tunes from "Turandot". One character is on the board of the San Francisco Opera, which is currently performing the work. Meanwhile Stefan is being very determined to hook up with a promising, though dangerous character, who works as a waiter. Is it love, lust, or research? Meanwhile, the FBI is unusually attentive to events. Climax. Incomplete resolution.
Tom Wlaschiha attractively carried the movie. Jim Thalman and Richard Conti also gave good acting performances. Karl Fischer and Brian Yates did well in smaller roles as a nurse and a volunteer, respectively, for an AIDS-related service. The rest of the cast merits little comment.
It was nice to have new San Francisco settings, with the Potrero, Tenderloin, and South of Market Districts shown, instead of the usual tourist areas (including Castro Street). Having one scene at the Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in Colma was a good change of pace.
The movie does bound along without giving complete back stories or explicitly tying up the loose ends. Stefan has some information before the action starts and some ideas on how to follow it up. His main methodology is walk wordlessly through sex clubs and wait for the clues and key characters to show up. He finds out about a third victim before the body is even removed from the premises. Intuitions. He is able to take a complicated route to break and enter without rehearsal. Lots of people have detailed memories of the plot of "Turandot". The relationships between the main bad guys is quite opaque. Why did Stefan keep wearing a cross? Who searched Stefan's room? Who killed one of the bad guys? Would the police be so lackadaisical? The list goes on. On a first viewing, one notices lots of loose ends. On a second viewing, one can use imagination to fill in many, but not all, of the gaps.
On the "Turandot" question, local opera fans really do replay their CDs and reread the librettos of the operas selected for performance each season by the San Francisco Opera. Stefan seems to live in a gay-friendly+ apartment building; the bad guys have reason to know the opera; the coincidence is not as impossible as some think. Still, the singing of "Nessun Dorma" at the party afterward seems unlikely, as a good singer saves his voice for the big time; maybe the wine flowed too freely?
My first viewing netted two stars. A second viewing netted three. A third would not earn a fourth. See it for Tom Wlaschiha, an interesting premise, and some new scenery.
This is not a movie for shallow people........2002-05-14
This is an excellent film. Period. Those who did not understand all the subtle undercurrents between the characters and did not appreciate the fact that the movie combines suspense, tension, drama, and romance, either prefer films that push everything in your face (like most of Hollywood's releases), or they began watching the movie with a pre-conceived notion that they wouldn't like it (possibly because of the other reviews here).
I am a fan of Indie movies and other venues that challenge the viewer to use the grey matter between their ears. If you also prefer to think for yourself, rather than be thought for, you will probably enjoy this movie as well.
Tom Wlaschiha gives a believable, realistic, sensual performance, and the other major characters behave like real people, rather than characters reading from a script. Perhaps a few scenes are a bit over the top, but then, so is real life from time to time. If the viewer doesn't recognize that, then I suggest that instead of bad-mouthing this movie, he or she should get a life of their own, provided they can tear themselves away from the WWF long enough.
Average customer rating:
- Nessun dorma
- Unique, intriguing HIV plot, suspensful story
- zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
- Positive On Bearing a Cross
- This is not a movie for shallow people.
|
No One Sleeps
Starring: Tom Wlaschiha , Irit Levi , Jim Thalman , Richard Conti , and Charles Shaw Robinson
Director: Jochen Hick
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
Thrillers
| Mystery & Suspense
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Mystery & Suspense
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
( N )
| Titles
| Features
| DVD
| Video
Used DVDs
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
| Action & Adventure
| African American Cinema
| Animation
| Anime & Manga
| Art House & International
| Classics
| Comedy
| Cult Movies
| Documentary
| Drama
| Educational
| Fitness & Yoga
| Gay & Lesbian
| Horror
| Kids & Family
| Military & War
| Music Video & Concerts
| Musicals & Performing Arts
| Mystery & Suspense
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Special Interests
| Sports
| Television
| Westerns
Similar Items:
- Dante's Cove
- The Conrad Boys
- Chill Out
- In the Flesh
- Adam & Steve (2005)
ASIN: B000059Z2E |
Customer Reviews:
Nessun dorma.......2006-02-20
Jochen Hick wrote and directed this little thriller of a suspense film based on the concept that the AIDS virus was a sheep virus mutated by the government to rid the world of gays and was apparently tested on convicts in the years before the outbreak of the hideous disease. Were it not for the poignancy of the concept of the film, this would fall into the category of the many films about the ruination of the world by a rampant non-prejudicial infective organism.
Stefan (Tom Wlaschiha) journeys from Berlin to San Francisco to investigate his father's scientific suppositions about the induced sheep virus and its effects of the convicts in whom it was infused. He meets with some disdain and resistance to a dead theory, but also encounters some folks who know of the theory and support his investigation. Simultaneously with his visit a series of serial murders takes place, each victim killed in a similar manner and each murder apparently accompanied by strains of music from Puccini's opera 'Turandot' which just happens to be opening at the San Francisco Opera. A police investigator Louise Tolliver (Irit Levi) and her companion cop (Kalene Parker) follow the murders while Stefan makes the rounds of the sex clubs and bars in San Francisco trying to locate men who may have been guinea pigs for his father's theory. He encounters a strange lad Jeffrey (Jim Thalman) with whom he has a cat and mouse attraction and a prominent Doctor Burroughs (Richard Conti) who seems oddly involved in the cast of suspects. How this all come to an end is the play of the film, a story as much about the search for self identity between Stefan and Jeffery as it is a case for investigation of murders.
While Tom Wlaschiha, Jim Thalman and Richard Conti do well with their roles (they are the only three who have any prior acting experience in the film!), the quality of the film sags considerably by the less than acceptable minimally talented Irit Levy and Kaylene Parker: when on screen the credibility of the story drops below zero. There are some small cameos by other actors that brighten the screen for the moments they inhabit, but in all the film is drowned by the incessant replay of 'Nessun dorma' as sung by Mario del Monaco from a recording o the opera - and that seems to be the reason for making the film! Good idea for a film and some good characterizations by the actors, but there is no resolution of the initial premise that started the whole thing. Grady Harp, February 06
Unique, intriguing HIV plot, suspensful story.......2006-01-06
Is the government suppressing information about HIV and AIDS? Is it possible that the AIDS virus originated as a governmental conspiracy, or an accidental result of a failed German experiment? No One Sleeps is one of the most intriguing movies about AIDS ever made. You need to watch it now, and
you need to tell your friends, and their friends, and so on, to watch it.
Stephen moves to San Francisco in search of the truth about AIDS. His father, now dead, left him some incredibly crucial information: a way to find some "lists" of names that prove that the AIDS virus started in a laboratory. Stephen is desperately
trying to complete his research before the people he is looking for die, as many of the long-term survivors of HIV and AIDS are being murdered at a ridiculously fast rate. Not only does he have to take on a murder mystery, but he is also confronted with so many of the problems that so many of the AIDS
activists and researchers face: not only is everyone dying, but a vast majority of the population feels defeated -- defeated by the government, defeated by their friends dying, defeated by the lack of research and money devoted to the catastrophe -- and don't have the energy to fight.
No One Sleeps dives head-on into some of the most serious questions of our time: where did AIDS come from? Was it a government conspiracy against gay people? Was it an accidental result of a failed experiment? Why are SO many people still becoming infected and dying every day--by murder or by disease? Is there any way of ever finding out all the truths? No One Sleeps gives us a glimpse into the life of people (many of them living with HIV and AIDS) devoting their lives to understanding why they, and so many of their friends, are dying. The murder plot is at times confusing, but still, very well done.
An incredibly powerful movie that you absolutely cannot pass up.
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.......2005-05-18
It was a good premise--a German researcher investigates his scientist father's claim of the origin of AIDS, but witnesses he tracks down turn up murdered before he can question them. The urban legend about the U.S. government creating the AIDS virus during biological weapons research could have made for a great paranoid thriller. But this dull, confusing mess never gave it a chance. The script is loaded with lapses of logic and coherence. How is it that the main character is allowed to wander onto crime scenes by the police, for example? The editing is so choppy that you often don't know that the protagonist's motives for his actions are until they're played out. The production is so cheap it looks like it was filmed on skid row. The acting is poor too--in the most intense scenes, the hero looks like he's forgotten a phone number. Also, what's with the repeated references to some Italian opera? To point out the obvious, the government would never use an opera as a basis to conceal evidence. It's infuriating to think of what Alfred Hitchcock could have done with this story. Instead, the most memorable thing about this movie is how misleading it's title is. I stayed awake with effort.
Positive On Bearing a Cross.......2002-05-20
The protagonist of "No One Sleeps" is Stefan Hein (played by Tom Wlaschiha), a doctoral student from a university in Berlin, who visits San Francisco to make a presentation at GGU (presumably Golden Gate University). Stefan presents an old idea, originally taken up by his father, that AIDS came about around 1978 when the US government allegedly tested varieties of sheep viruses on prisoners in return for releasing the prisoners earlier than expected. Although the reception to the presentation was rather impolite, Stefan is determined to spend some time in the City seeing if he can find any more records or people to substantiate the theory.
At the university, Stefan makes three acquaintances. One is a friendly graduate student, Sascha; one is a neurologist, Dr. Richard Burroghs (played by Richard Conti), who says he found Stefan's presentation the best of the day; the third is a bearded hunk, Jeffrey Russo (played by Jim Thalman), who approaches Stefan.
Meanwhile, one dead body has already shown up in a Presidio fortification. Stefan's research led him via an AIDS Project office to a club kid, whose entrance is as a corpse. At both deaths, witnesses heard music from Puccini's last grand opera, "Turandot".
Stefan pokes around. The police poke around. Connections gradually appear between the characters. Some people hum tunes from "Turandot". One character is on the board of the San Francisco Opera, which is currently performing the work. Meanwhile Stefan is being very determined to hook up with a promising, though dangerous character, who works as a waiter. Is it love, lust, or research? Meanwhile, the FBI is unusually attentive to events. Climax. Incomplete resolution.
Tom Wlaschiha attractively carried the movie. Jim Thalman and Richard Conti also gave good acting performances. Karl Fischer and Brian Yates did well in smaller roles as a nurse and a volunteer, respectively, for an AIDS-related service. The rest of the cast merits little comment.
It was nice to have new San Francisco settings, with the Potrero, Tenderloin, and South of Market Districts shown, instead of the usual tourist areas (including Castro Street). Having one scene at the Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in Colma was a good change of pace.
The movie does bound along without giving complete back stories or explicitly tying up the loose ends. Stefan has some information before the action starts and some ideas on how to follow it up. His main methodology is walk wordlessly through sex clubs and wait for the clues and key characters to show up. He finds out about a third victim before the body is even removed from the premises. Intuitions. He is able to take a complicated route to break and enter without rehearsal. Lots of people have detailed memories of the plot of "Turandot". The relationships between the main bad guys is quite opaque. Why did Stefan keep wearing a cross? Who searched Stefan's room? Who killed one of the bad guys? Would the police be so lackadaisical? The list goes on. On a first viewing, one notices lots of loose ends. On a second viewing, one can use imagination to fill in many, but not all, of the gaps.
On the "Turandot" question, local opera fans really do replay their CDs and reread the librettos of the operas selected for performance each season by the San Francisco Opera. Stefan seems to live in a gay-friendly+ apartment building; the bad guys have reason to know the opera; the coincidence is not as impossible as some think. Still, the singing of "Nessun Dorma" at the party afterward seems unlikely, as a good singer saves his voice for the big time; maybe the wine flowed too freely?
My first viewing netted two stars. A second viewing netted three. A third would not earn a fourth. See it for Tom Wlaschiha, an interesting premise, and some new scenery.
This is not a movie for shallow people........2002-05-14
This is an excellent film. Period. Those who did not understand all the subtle undercurrents between the characters and did not appreciate the fact that the movie combines suspense, tension, drama, and romance, either prefer films that push everything in your face (like most of Hollywood's releases), or they began watching the movie with a pre-conceived notion that they wouldn't like it (possibly because of the other reviews here).
I am a fan of Indie movies and other venues that challenge the viewer to use the grey matter between their ears. If you also prefer to think for yourself, rather than be thought for, you will probably enjoy this movie as well.
Tom Wlaschiha gives a believable, realistic, sensual performance, and the other major characters behave like real people, rather than characters reading from a script. Perhaps a few scenes are a bit over the top, but then, so is real life from time to time. If the viewer doesn't recognize that, then I suggest that instead of bad-mouthing this movie, he or she should get a life of their own, provided they can tear themselves away from the WWF long enough.
DVD:
- Campion - The Case of the Late Pig
- Bulldog Drummond's Peril
- Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century - Out of this World
- Blackmail/Easy Virtue
- Black Cat
- Dorothy L. Sayers Mysteries - Strong Poison (The Lord Peter Wimsey-Harriet Vane Collection)
- Nadie Conoce a Nadie (Nobody Knows Anybody)
- The Hitchcock Collection
- Subway
- Sweet Evil
DVD
DVD
DVD
Best Legs in the 8th Grade
Foyle's War: The German Woman
Persuaders!: Collection One [4 Discs] [1971] (REGION 1) (NTS
DVD: Easy Rider
Wie wir vergeben unsern Schuldigern