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Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind Poster

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

You can erase someone from your mind. Getting them out of your heart is another story.
2004 | 108m | English

(1153561 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 9 (history)

Details

Joel Barish, heartbroken that his girlfriend underwent a procedure to erase him from her memory, decides to do the same. However, as he watches his memories of her fade away, he realises that he still loves her, and may be too late to correct his mistake.
Release Date: Mar 19, 2004
Director: Michel Gondry
Writer: Michel Gondry, Pierre Bismuth, Charlie Kaufman
Genres: Science Fiction, Drama, Romance
Keywords new york city, deja vu, operation, memory, heartbreak, memory manipulation, jealousy, dreams, love, relationship, 2000s, regret, amnesia, relationship problems, brainwashing, nonlinear timeline
Production Companies Anonymous Content, This is that, Focus Features
Box Office Revenue: $72,258,126
Budget: $20,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 04, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Jim Carrey Joel Barish
Kate Winslet Clementine Kruczynski
Kirsten Dunst Mary
Mark Ruffalo Stan
Elijah Wood Patrick
Tom Wilkinson Dr. Mierzwiak
Jane Adams Carrie
David Cross Rob
Deirdre O'Connell Hollis
Thomas Jay Ryan Frank
Ryan Whitney Young Joel
Lola Daehler Young Clementine
Debbon Ayer Joel's Mother
Gerry Robert Byrne Train Conductor
Brian Price Young Bully
Josh Flitter Young Bully
Paulie Litt Young Bully
Amir Ali Said Young Bully
Lauren Adler Rollerblader (uncredited)
Name Job
Michel Gondry Story, Director
Philip Stockton Supervising Sound Editor
David Stein Art Direction
Allen Weisinger Makeup Artist
Ellen Kuras Director of Photography
Christopher Norr Camera Operator
Pierre Bismuth Story
Valdís Óskarsdóttir Editor
Dan Leigh Production Design
Melissa Toth Costume Design
Brian Smyj Stunt Coordinator
Danny Aiello III Stunts
Stephanie Finochio Stunts
Bill Anagnos Stunts
Cort Hessler Stunts
Peewee Piemonte Stunts
Joseph Quirk Gaffer
Jeanne McCarthy Casting
Ron von Blomberg Set Decoration
Mary Cybulski Script Supervisor
John C. Nadeau Gaffer
Mark Dornfeld Visual Effects Supervisor
Louis Morin Visual Effects Supervisor
Kam Chan Foley Editor
Marko Costanzo Foley Artist
Eugene Gearty Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Sound Designer
George A. Lara Foley Mixer
Marissa Littlefield ADR Editor
Tom Nelson Sound Mixer
Jay Peck Foley Artist
Fred Rosenberg Dialogue Editor
Reilly Steele Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Paul Urmson Sound Effects Editor
Michael Hausman First Assistant Director
Peter Thorell Second Second Assistant Director
David L. Bushell Unit Production Manager
Carlos Omar Guerra First Assistant Camera
Braden Belmonte Second Assistant Camera
Peter Agliata "B" Camera Operator
Mark Schmidt Additional Camera
Stanley Fernandez Jr. First Assistant "B" Camera
Christopher Raymond Second Assistant "B" Camera
Angela Bellisio Camera Loader
David Lee Still Photographer
Tommy Louie Boom Operator
Scott P. Murphy Assistant Art Director
Hinju Kim Assistant Art Director
Natalie N. Dorset Assistant Set Decoration
Addy McClelland Art Department Coordinator
Michael Leather Leadman
Ruth DeLeon On Set Dresser
Roman Greller Set Dresser
David Scott Gagnon Set Dresser
John Roche Set Dresser
Brian Buteau Set Dresser
Christian Brockey Assistant Production Coordinator
Francesca Paris Hairstylist
Noriko Watanabe Hairstylist, Makeup Artist
Peter Owen Wigmaker
Kyra Panchenko Key Makeup Artist
Michelle Johnson Key Hair Stylist
Jill Kliber Assistant Costume Designer
Lisa R. Frucht Wardrobe Supervisor
David Page Costumer
Cara Borrelli Costumer
Mark Summers Best Boy Electric
Andrea Cronin-Souza Electrician
Paul Daley Rigging Gaffer
Robert M. Andres Key Grip
Chris Skutch Best Boy Grip
Lamont Crawford Dolly Grip
Alison Barton Grip
Mel Cannon Grip
Tony Campenni Grip
John Panuccio Key Rigging Grip
Kevin Ladson Property Master
R. Vincent Smith Assistant Property Master
Morgan Pitts Props
E.J. Evans Stunts
Artie Malesci Stunts
Stephen A. Pope Stunts
John R. Favre Stunts
Michael Russo Stunts
Frank Kern Foley Editor
Steven Visscher Foley Editor
Chris Fielder Assistant Sound Editor
Larry Wineland Assistant Sound Editor
Michele Ferrone Visual Effects Producer
Blythe Cappello Casting
Natasha Cuba Casting Associate
John Srednicki Casting Assistant
Sage Lehman Casting Assistant
Linda R. Chen Casting Assistant
Grant Wilfley Extras Casting
Kristian Sorge Extras Casting Assistant
Nick Miller Construction Coordinator
Brent Haywood Construction Coordinator
Mark Bero Special Effects
Drew Jiritano Special Effects Coordinator
Thomas Viviano Special Effects
Jeffrey Rollins Set Dresser
Charlie Kaufman Screenplay, Story
Jon Brion Original Music Composer
Scott Ferguson Second Assistant Director
Ray Angelic Assistant Unit Manager
Name Title
Anthony Bregman Producer
Steve Golin Producer
David L. Bushell Executive Producer
Glenn Williamson Executive Producer
Georges Bermann Executive Producer
Charlie Kaufman Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 75 93 64
2024 5 77 95 58
2024 6 76 111 48
2024 7 84 106 57
2024 8 68 86 52
2024 9 64 97 52
2024 10 80 137 55
2024 11 91 157 65
2024 12 77 102 58
2025 1 80 105 66
2025 2 70 105 15
2025 3 26 83 4
2025 4 14 16 11
2025 5 12 14 11
2025 6 12 14 9
2025 7 12 13 11
2025 8 11 14 8
2025 9 12 15 9

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 181 518
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 95 557
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 182 490
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 105 497
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 115 542
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 128 484
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 35 567
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 99 491
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 196 509
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 133 415
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 127 504
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 213 452
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 275 469
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 295 582

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Reviews

tanty
8.0

Fresh and surprising with great script, dialogues and cut. The cast is also fantastic. ...

Jun 23, 2021
Wuchak
8.0

***Inventive drama/romance with Jim Carrey, Kate Winslet and so much more*** A man (Jim Carrey) discovers that his babe (Kate Winslet) had her memory of their relationship removed via the medical procedures of an innovative company. He decides to get the surgery as well, but as the technicians (M ... ark Ruffalo & Elijah Wood) conduct the procedure he changes his mind! Can he escape with his memory intact and possibly save the relationship? Tom Wilkinson plays the doctor and Kirsten Dunst the secretary. “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” (2004) is a drama/sci-fi/romance hybrid that’s so confusing during its first half that it fails to captivate (and is even annoying) but, if you persevere, everything starts making sense by the midpoint, ushering in an entertaining and insightful second half. The movie’s depth naturally makes it improve on repeat viewings wherein it’s more understandable as you put the pieces together. Viewers who complain that a certain person is too dramatic, selfish and high maintenance to put up with for more than a month didn’t get the closing moral, which is both true and profound: Couples can (and should) realize the flaws of their mate, which they genuinely don't like, but it's "Okay." That's true love. There are also unexpected peripheral gems on unethical behavior in a supposedly professional environment, secret relationships, discarding unwanted skeletons, and more. Lastly, curvy, vivacious Winslet shines and it’s nice to see Carrey in a serious role. The film runs 1 hour, 48 minutes, and was shot in the New York City area (Yonkers, Montauk, Mount Vernon, Manhattan and Brooklyn). GRADE: A-

Jun 23, 2021
LovingStory
10.0

This was one of the first movies I really loved. Some moments are especially beautiful and I appreciate the folks who put in the labor to make this. Thank you ...

Jun 23, 2021
tensharpe
8.0

“Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” is a movie that uses the fragility of memory and hurt of love to show the desperate measures taken by a couple who decide to break up. After two years of living together, Introverted Joel Barrish ( Jim Carey ) and extrovert Clementine Kruczynski ( Kate Winslet ... ) undertake extreme procedures to erase any memory of each other.  What director Michel Gondry and Writer Charlie Kaufman have created is a movie designed to slowly release forgotten incidents and emotions as the audience discover the film is running in reverse. Bearing witness to love’s decay the audience are thrown sidelines with the introduction of Patrick ( Elijah Wood ) and Stan ( Mark Ruffalo ). Both Patrick and Stan work for Lacuna a private medical company with some rather dodgy practices regarding memory erasure. Along with Patrick and Stan, Mary ( Kirsten Dunst ) Stan’s girlfriend is also a work colleague and joins the other two when they are tasked with erasing any memory of Clementine from Joel’s mind. Patrick however uses information provided to Lacuna by both Joel and Clementine to manipulate Clementine in an attempt to get her to fall in love with him. What ensues is a battle of the mind to try and save their relationship after discovering that all was not as bad as the couple believed. But with each recalled memory there is a doomed ending that ends up being erased. The only hope is to try and hide Clementine in an earlier non related memory in Joel’s mind as Lacuna remove all traces of each other. The climax of the film comes with a surprise that complicates any post mind erasing procedures.  “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” evokes real devastation in lost love and tells a fantasy tale of how we all try to erase those hurtful memories. However, after everything, our memories are all we really have, they make us who we are, once they are gone, we ourselves are surely gone.

Jan 28, 2023
SoSmooth1982
6.0

This is a really weird movie. I had to watch it about 3 or 4 times before you really figure it out. It's a good concept but a bit confusing sometimes. ...

May 15, 2023
Geronimo1967
7.0

When the shy “Joel” (Jim Carrey) encounters the blue-haired “Clementine” (Kate Winslet) he immediately falls for her and embarks on a life-changing romance. Thing is, I think she finds him just a bit too dull and so makes arrangements to have him erased from her memory! Whilst he is going through he ... r stuff he discovers a card that declares she’s had him wiped. Despondent, he goes to see the same doctor (Tom Wilkinson) and opts for the same procedure. He has to garner together all their memorabilia so they can map his brain then “Stan” (Mark Ruffalo) and his sidekick “Patrick” (Elijah Wood) can come in while he’s asleep and do some cerebral zapping. Thing is, though, it seems that this couple have put in a few safeguards in the form of hidden memories and that leads to both of them having a series of entertaining escapades as they try to stay one step ahead of the eradication process whilst also trying to remember or decide whether they like each other or want to be together at all! It’s this cat and mouse process that makes both realise what life might be like without the other! There’s a twist, too, though. The drippy “Patrick” has also taken a bit of a shine to her and so has been using the memories of ‘Joel” to muddy the waters of her affections. Meantime, there is the doctor’s secretary “Mary” (Kirsten Dunst) whom we also realise has skin in this rather complex game of truth or dare (to tell the truth)… I was never really a fan of Carrey but he’s on good form here, gelling well with Winslet in this quirky story of loneliness and reticence that allows each of the characters to have their moment in the sun. This is a creatively constructed drama that mixes chronologies and timelines to keep us guessing as to what’s real, what’s imaginary and what’s just wishful thinking as we see their relationship play out through multiple, rapidly evaporating, scenarios. Carrey’s portrayal juggles well the frustrated with the entangled and it does all make you wonder if it might ever be better to be able to compartmentalise our thoughts and reminiscences and then conveniently hit delete - either arbitrarily or together.

Feb 13, 2025
arrowplex
N/A

_Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind_, that darling of indie cinema and perennial staple of dorm-room philosophizing, is an object lesson in the dangers of confusing gimmickry with profundity; the cinematic equivalent of a hipster mustache – all style, no substance. Its premise – a pair of lovers, ... post-breakup, undergo a medical procedure to erase all memory of one another – might, in capable hands, have led to a trenchant commentary on memory, loss, and the human condition. But under Michel Gondry’s muddled direction and Charlie Kaufman’s ever-useless pen (and seemingly empty skull), the film devolves into a cinematic hall of mirrors: reflexive, affected, and – most damning of all – insufferably pleased with itself. It is the kind of film that mistakes its own incoherence for emotional depth, and its own disjointed narrative for intellectual sophistication; a muddle mess about as profound as a fortune cookie. To speak plainly, the plot is not merely nonlinear; it is lazily elliptical, allergic to clarity, and padded with scenes so weighed down with pseudo-meaningful gestures that one might suspect a deliberate attempt to obfuscate the absence of actual substance. It’s like trying to navigate a maze designed by someone who’s never heard of straight lines. One floats through Joel’s (Jim Carrey) collapsing memories not with a sense of tragic poignancy, but with the vague irritation of being stuck in someone else's dream – a dream notable mostly for how tedious it is. The much-lauded surreal imagery – disappearing faces, flickering lights, collapsing sets – functions less as metaphor and more as distraction, a magician’s hand waving furiously while the other produces nothing of significance. One has to wonder if this film was intended for research into the schizophrenic mind; disjointed and choppy like someone who says a lot without ever expressing anything resembling a coherent thought. Then there is Mr. Carrey himself, who gives what might charitably be called the most listless performance of his career. Known for his seemingly limitless energy and brash charm, he here attempts to have a quiet subtlety that reads, unfortunately, as blankness. His character, Joel, is not a man in the throes of existential despair or repressed longing, but a man simply bored with both himself and the film he occupies. The emotional range he displays spans from catatonically miserable to slightly less catatonically miserable. Watching Carrey fumble through this role is like watching a candle attempt to impersonate the sun. One longs for the overly expressive attorney of _Liar Liar_ – at least there, the emotion was believable. Ultimately, this film exemplifies a particular strain of artistic pretension: the belief that melancholy plus montage equals meaning. Its sentimental nihilism – love is doomed, memory is unreliable, nothing matters but let's cry about it anyway – is presented not with wit or irony, but with a dreary sincerity that borders on the laughable. What is touted as a meditation on the value of pain and the necessity of memory is, in fact, an exercise in narrative self-indulgence and emotional cowardice. One leaves not enlightened or moved, but merely relieved that it’s over. The spotless mind, indeed – though not in the way the filmmakers intended.

Apr 11, 2025