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Broken Flowers

 
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Broken Flowers

  • Director: Jim Jarmusch
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Psychological Drama, Road Movie
  • Themes: Journey of Self-Discovery, Fathers and Sons, Haunted By the Past
  • Main Cast: Bill Murray, Jeffrey Wright, Sharon Stone, Frances Conroy, Jessica Lange, Tilda Swinton, Julie Delpy
  • Release Year: 2005
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 107 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

A man sets out to find the son he didn't know he had and winds up getting answers to some questions he never asked in this comedy drama from director Jim Jarmusch. Don Johnston (Bill Murray) is an emotionally blank middle-aged man who has never married and lives a quiet, comfortable life thanks to shrewd investments in computers (though he doesn't use one himself). After being given his walking papers by his latest girlfriend, Sherry (Julie Delpy), Don receives an anonymous letter informing him he fathered a son 19 years ago, and that the boy wants to find his dad. Not sure what to do, Don shows the note to Winston (Jeffrey Wright), a neighbor who fancies himself an amateur detective. With Winston's help, Don narrows the list of possible mothers down to four women, and with a mixture of reluctance and resigned determination he sets out to find them. Armed with a CD of traveling music from Winston, Don pays unannounced visits to Laura (Sharon Stone), an oversexed widow with a libidinous teenage daughter (Alexis Dziena); Dora (Frances Conroy), a stuffy real estate agent; Penny (Tilda Swinton), an aging biker with no happy memories of Don; and Carmen (Jessica Lange), a self-styled analyst for pets whose outward eccentricity disguises a firm inner stability. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

By this point in his career, Bill Murray had become remarkably adept at playing characters who use coldness and deadpan humor to keep the world at bay, while offering glimpses of the pain underneath the mask of indifference. In Lost in Translation and his collaborations with Wes Anderson, the characters Murray played ended up revealing themselves in small physical gestures, vocal tics, or in subtle facial expressions. This ability to invest a seemingly emotionally dead person with sudden depth makes him the ideal actor to collaborate with Jim Jarmusch. The best Jarmusch films include a protagonist who sees the world in the same still, deadpan way Jarmusch's camera does, and Don Johnston is one of those characters. A womanizer too bored with himself to put up much of a fight when his current girlfriend walks out on him, Murray drains all bathos from Johnston's depression and lassitude. The character begins unlikable and the actor never once attempts to win the audience's sympathy. However, while reading aloud the anonymous note that informs him that he is a father, Don's voice catches just once. And in that superb moment, Murray reveals the depth of feelings that the character has locked away. That moment allows the rest of the film to resonate on a much deeper level than it would appear to on the surface. The final stop on his journey, at the gravesite of a former girlfriend, should provide a melodramatic moment of near operatic sadness and emotion, but the stillness of Murray and Jarmusch's art leaves the viewer just as devastated as if Don wailed to the heavens. The duo understands how to invest the smallest moments and gestures with profound depth and feeling. Broken Flowers is one of the best films of either of their careers. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide

Cast

Mark Webber - The Kid; Chloë Sevigny - Carmen's Assistant; Christopher McDonald - Ron; Alexis Dziena - Lolita; Larry Fessenden - Will; Pell James - Sun Green; Heather Alicia Simms - Mona; Brea Frazier - Rita; Christopher Bauer - Dan

Credit

Sarah Frank - Art Director, Ellen Lewis - Casting, Ann Ruark - Co-producer, John Dunn - Costume Designer, Todd Pfeiffer - First Assistant Director, Jim Jarmusch - Director, Jay Rabinowitz - Editor, Mulatu Astatke - Composer (Music Score), Mark Friedberg - Production Designer, Frederick Elmes - Cinematographer, Jon Kilik - Producer, Stacey Smith - Producer, Drew Kunin - Sound/Sound Designer, Jim Jarmusch - Screenwriter, Robert Hein - Supervising Sound Editor, Lydia Marks - Set Decorator

Similar Movies

Box of Moonlight; World Traveler; Paris, Texas; Punch-Drunk Love; Five Easy Pieces; Un 32 Aout Sur Terre; The Five Senses; Buffalo '66; My Own Private Idaho; Sideways; About Schmidt; Passion Fish; Don't Come Knocking; Looking for Kitty
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Broken Flowers

The film poster
Directed by Jim Jarmusch
Produced by Jon Kilik
Stacey Smith
Written by Jim Jarmusch
(Inspired by an idea from Bill Raden and Sara Driver)
Starring Bill Murray
Jeffrey Wright
Sharon Stone
Frances Conroy
Jessica Lange
Tilda Swinton
Julie Delpy
Mark Webber
Chloë Sevigny
Christopher McDonald
Alexis Dziena
Cinematography Frederick Elmes
Editing by Jay Rabinowitz
Distributed by Focus Features
Release date(s) United States:
August 5, 2005
Running time 105 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Broken Flowers is a 2005 comedy-drama film written and directed by Jim Jarmusch and produced by Jon Kilik and Stacey Smith. Its main actors are Bill Murray, Jeffrey Wright, Jessica Lange, Sharon Stone, Frances Conroy, Tilda Swinton, Julie Delpy, and Mark Webber.

Contents

Plot

The main character, Don Johnston (Bill Murray), is a former Don Juan who wants to live in quiet retirement, having made a small fortune in the computer industry. He is content to lounge around watching old movies and listening to classical music. His current girlfriend, Sherry (Julie Delpy), is ending their relationship and moving out of his house when a letter in a pink envelope arrives. After she walks out, he reads the letter; it purports to be from an unnamed former girlfriend, informing him that he has a 19-year-old son who may be looking for him. Initially Don doesn't intend to do anything about it, but his busybody neighbor Winston (Jeffrey Wright), who is a mystery novel enthusiast, urges Don to investigate. Winston researches the current locations of the five women most likely to have written the letter, gives Don the information (along with maps, MapQuest print-outs, and air flight reservations), urges him to visit them, and tells Don that he will drive him to the airport the next morning.

Ultimately he meets with four women, each encounter worse than the last:

  • Laura (Sharon Stone) works as a closet and drawer organizer and is the widow of a race car driver. She has a teenage daughter, Lolita (Alexis Dziena), who flirts outrageously with Don. That night, Laura sleeps with Don.
  • Dora (Frances Conroy) is a realtor. Once a "flower child" of the 1960s, she is deeply melancholic, resigned to being miserable in her marriage to Ron (Christopher McDonald).
  • Carmen (Jessica Lange) works as an "animal communicator." Don recalls how she was formerly so passionate about becoming a lawyer. But "passion is a funny thing," she says. She is cold to Don.
  • Penny (Tilda Swinton) lives in a rural area amongst bikers. She holds a grudge against Don for some reason. When Don asks her whether she has a son, she becomes enraged, which results in one of her biker friends punching Don out. He comes to the next morning in his car, in the middle of a field, with a nasty cut near his left eye.

Don then stops at a florist to buy flowers from a friendly and attractive young woman named Sun Green (Pell James) who bandages his cut. He leaves the flowers at the grave of the fifth woman, Michelle Pepe, who Don originally thought might be the mother before finding out she had died five years prior. (Earlier Don told Winston he had loved Michelle — his only mention of love throughout the film.) As he kneels at her gravestone he softly says "Hello, beautiful."

Disillusioned, Don returns home where he meets a young man in the street (Mark Webber) whom he suspects may be his son. He buys him a meal, but when he remarks that the young man believes that Don is his father, the young man becomes agitated and flees.

As Don looks on, he notices a Volkswagen Beetle drive past. A young man in the passenger seat — played by Homer Murray, the real-life son of Bill Murray[1] — is listening to the music which Don himself has been listening to throughout the film. Both the young man Don buys lunch for and the one in the car are wearing track suits like Don's. The young man in the car holds unblinking eye contact with Don while the car drives on and away. Don is left standing in the middle of the road.

In the end, none of the mysteries posed by the film are resolved. Don ends his journey no closer to discovering which of the women wrote the letter, and there's even a suggestion that Sherry sent the letter to cause Don an existential crisis. It's unclear whether the young man in the Volkswagen is Don's son, or if Don has reached a point where he'll wonder whether every boy he sees might be his son. The last moment has the camera spinning around Don's head (a full plus a half rotation) with a blank expression on his face.

Cast

Don Johnston with Laura (Sharon Stone).

Production

The film's working title was Dead Flowers (as seen on the clapperboard in the "making-of" film in the DVD's extras). The film is dedicated to French director Jean Eustache. In an interview, Jarmusch said he felt close to Eustache for his commitment to making films in a unique and independent fashion.

It was filmed in Rockland County and Westchester County, New York, as well as in New Jersey.[2] In agreeing to do this film, Bill Murray set the conditions that it would only take six weeks and that he was never more than 60 miles from his home in Rockland County, New York.

Director Jim Jarmusch generated the writing that would be on the pink letter, by asking each of the four female leads to write a version of the letter from the point of view of their respective characters. He used an amalgamation of those four letters in the finished film, "using pieces of their own language."

Release

Broken Flowers opened August 5, 2005 in the US in a limited release.

Awards and nominations

At the 2005 Cannes Film Festival, the film was nominated for the Palme d'Or and won the Grand Prix.

Lawsuit

Screenwriter Reed Martin sued Jarmusch in March 2006, claiming that the director stole the film's concept from a very similar script that had circulated among several people eventually involved in the production. Jarmusch denied the charges and stated in response that Martin's claim has "absolutely no merit."[3] On September 28, 2007, a Los Angeles federal court jury rejected Martin's claim that Jarmusch and Focus Films stole the screenplay from Martin.[4]

Soundtrack

Music from Broken Flowers
Soundtrack by various artists
Released August 2, 2005
Genre Jazz, rock, pop, soul, reggae, classical
Length 38:01
Label Decca
Professional reviews

The soundtrack to the film features an eclectic mix of music, chiefly using instrumentals by Ethiopian jazz artist Mulatu Astatke as the main score, mixed with garage rock (The Brian Jonestown Massacre, The Greenhornes, Holly Golightly), stoner metal (Sleep), soul (Marvin Gaye), rocksteady reggae (The Tennors), and classical (Gabriel Fauré's Requiem).

Track listing

  1. "There Is an End" (Holly Golightly with The Greenhornes) - 3:05
  2. "Yegelle Tezeta" (Mulatu Astatke) - 3:14
  3. "Ride Yu Donkey" (The Tennors) - 2:03
  4. "I Want You" (Marvin Gaye) - 3:57
  5. "Yekermo Sew" (Mulatu Astatke) - 4:03
  6. "Not if You Were the Last Dandy on Earth" (The Brian Jonestown Massacre) - 2:49
  7. "Tell Me Now So I Know" (Holly Golightly) - 2:02
  8. "Gubèlyé" (Mulatu Astatke) - 4:35
  9. "Dopesmoker" (Sleep) - 3:57
    • Abridged version of 63:31-minute track.
  10. Requiem in D minor, Op. 48 ("Pie Jesu") (Oxford Camerata) - 3:30
  11. "Ethanopium" (Dengue Fever) - 4:38
    • Instrumental, composed by Mulatu Astatke
  12. "Unnatural Habitat" (The Greenhornes) - 2:08

Other songs in the film

Several songs in the film are not on the soundtrack album. They include:

References

  1. ^ Homer Murray at Internet Movie Database (retrieved on December 14, 2006)
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ Kahn, Joseph P. July 3, 2006. "Shattered dreams", Boston Globe (retrieved via International Herald Tribune on August 28, 2007).
  4. ^ City News Service

External links

Awards
Preceded by
Oldboy
Grand Prix, Cannes
2005
Succeeded by
Flanders

 
 

 

Copyrights:

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