I'm not sure that anybody who has sat down to Darren Aronofsky's Requiem For a Dream would admit that they were particularly excited to experience it all over again at any given point. That's to say, Dream would prove itself to be a punishing experience for even the most hardened of movie-goers; its content to show addiction at its most uncompromising has never been better rendered - Aronofsky wanted to shell-shock those who dared to see his movie. He certainly succeeded. Dream deals with all kinds of addiction, including money and coffee, but is truly shattering in its willingness to depict the horrors of drug addiction without any kind of fanfare or Hollywood pandering. We get the sense, then, that his characters have reached their lowest points, which is the feeling you get walking away from this movie when it's finally over. Requiem is certainly great enough to warrant five or six viewings, but whether you'd want to... well, that's an entirely different matter.