It's a sad and beautiful world: the Jim Jarmusch poll.

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (305 of them)

maybe it's just a lot easier to feel sad for Forest Whittaker than it is for Johnny Depp

gabbneb, Thursday, 13 December 2007 01:14 (eighteen years ago)

Well I don't think you are really supposed to feel sad for Johnny Depp.

Alex in SF, Thursday, 13 December 2007 01:15 (eighteen years ago)

The indie/artsy/outsider voice wanted to vote for Down By Law or Stranger Than Paradise. But the viewer in me won out and voted Mystery Train. Mainly because of it's repeatability. Screamin Jay Hawkins & Cinque Lee? Absolutely classic. &fwiw, Permanent Vacation was bad. Bad, bad.

Bobbi Peru, Thursday, 13 December 2007 01:36 (eighteen years ago)

Well I don't think you are really supposed to feel sad for Johnny Depp.

no I suppose not, but for what he represents I meant

gabbneb, Thursday, 13 December 2007 01:54 (eighteen years ago)

that Gary Farmer is so good-natured and has such funny sayings and no wonky eye

gabbneb, Thursday, 13 December 2007 01:55 (eighteen years ago)

learn to read better

*takes a reading course*

what you said is still retarded

roxymuzak, Thursday, 13 December 2007 02:04 (eighteen years ago)

i guess calling me names is a way to get me to pay attention to you. which, you know, i would never do otherwise.

gabbneb, Thursday, 13 December 2007 02:11 (eighteen years ago)

*takes a caring course*

roxymuzak, Thursday, 13 December 2007 02:12 (eighteen years ago)

i'm gonna see the golden compass tonight

omar little, Thursday, 13 December 2007 02:26 (eighteen years ago)

i know nothing about it!

omar little, Thursday, 13 December 2007 02:26 (eighteen years ago)

something about bears, nicole kidman looking bitchy, and daniel craig ftw in the end probably

omar little, Thursday, 13 December 2007 02:27 (eighteen years ago)

nicole kidman in looking bitchy shock

omar little, Thursday, 13 December 2007 02:27 (eighteen years ago)

she cant even help it anymore

omar little, Thursday, 13 December 2007 02:27 (eighteen years ago)

ALL OTM

roxymuzak, Thursday, 13 December 2007 02:28 (eighteen years ago)

Mystery Train - for Screamin' Jay, the Carl Perkins dialogue, Natchez = Matches, that fucking awesome pan shot of the Italian women in the airport with the airplane taking off behind her, and of course, "lost in space".

http://img529.imageshack.us/img529/9940/18830783gl1.jpg

Pleasant Plains, Thursday, 13 December 2007 03:13 (eighteen years ago)

Steve Buscemi is the only actor in that truck cab who's still alive.

Pleasant Plains, Thursday, 13 December 2007 03:13 (eighteen years ago)

Or, as gabbnebb might say: they are all alive except the one on the right and the one on the left.

roxymuzak, Thursday, 13 December 2007 07:27 (eighteen years ago)

alex's ranking is otm on all counts.

tipsy mothra, Thursday, 13 December 2007 07:40 (eighteen years ago)

although ok maybe i'd bump stranger than paradise up to 2nd place. i love that movie unconditionally.

love him for his movies, and also for carving out the career he's had. i'm not really sure how he's done it, since i don't think he's ever made much money for himself or anyone else. although maybe not caring a whole lot about that is a necessary ingredient. (also probably doesn't hurt to be the coolest guy in the room, which he probably often is.)

tipsy mothra, Thursday, 13 December 2007 07:49 (eighteen years ago)

1) dead man
2) stranger than fiction
2) down by law
2) mystery train
5) the rest
6) except for the ones i haven't seen (permanent vacation, year of the horse)

remy bean, Thursday, 13 December 2007 07:56 (eighteen years ago)

dead man is like one of my top movies of ... uh ... ever?

remy bean, Thursday, 13 December 2007 07:56 (eighteen years ago)

Dead Man is amazing from beginning to end, and back round again.

Noodle Vague, Thursday, 13 December 2007 08:04 (eighteen years ago)

I do have a weak spot for Ghost Dog, I admit

warmsherry, Thursday, 13 December 2007 08:17 (eighteen years ago)

i haven't seen year of the horse, but the neil young score (if you can call it that) to dead man is one of my favorite soundtracks.

tipsy mothra, Thursday, 13 December 2007 08:26 (eighteen years ago)

i'm with remy, noodle and tipsy. one of my all-time favourites.

Rubyredd, Thursday, 13 December 2007 09:16 (eighteen years ago)

Strangerthan Paradise by a ocuntry mile.

baaderonixx, Thursday, 13 December 2007 09:23 (eighteen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

ILX System, Monday, 17 December 2007 00:01 (eighteen years ago)

xxxpost: I love Dead Man except for the soundtrack (and I am a Neil Young fan). It's really lazy and boring. I mean, compare it to Ry Cooder's Paris, Texas.

spectra, Monday, 17 December 2007 03:10 (eighteen years ago)

really? that's interesting, because i was never a neil young fan till i saw dead man. but ry cooder's st for paris, texas is fucking awesome.

Rubyredd, Monday, 17 December 2007 03:23 (eighteen years ago)

Everything about Dead Man sets it apart. The entertaining ugly violence, the score, his best-looking black & white film and his best cast: Depp, Robert Mitchum, Gabriel Byrne, John Hurt, Iggy Pop, Crispin Glover, Alfred Molina, Billy Bob Thornton, and Bishop.

Cosmo Vitelli, Monday, 17 December 2007 05:12 (eighteen years ago)

dead man is like one of my top movies of ... uh ... ever?

-- remy bean, Wednesday, December 12, 2007 11:56 PM (5 days ago) Bookmark Link

strgn, Monday, 17 December 2007 08:06 (eighteen years ago)

that soundtrack

strgn, Monday, 17 December 2007 08:09 (eighteen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

ILX System, Tuesday, 18 December 2007 00:01 (eighteen years ago)

six months pass...

i don't get 'dead man'. it's going great guns until he meets the indian guy then it's zzzzzzzzzzz all the way, though the end is nice.

banriquit, Saturday, 21 June 2008 12:44 (seventeen years ago)

wow me and alex in sf have the same jarmusch preferences

jhøshea, Saturday, 21 June 2008 12:50 (seventeen years ago)

i don't get 'dead man'. it's going great guns until he meets the indian guy then it's zzzzzzzzzzz all the way, though the end is nice.

if you would like more entertainment from your tragedies, i would refer you instead to the film 'ghost dog', which has gunshots

gabbneb, Saturday, 21 June 2008 13:22 (seventeen years ago)

i guess dead man has those too. but it's in black and white. also, ghost dog has, like, dope beats and stuff.

gabbneb, Saturday, 21 June 2008 13:23 (seventeen years ago)

yeah 'ghost dog' is the freshness.

but with 'dead man', you get the feeling the mystical shit is for real.

banriquit, Saturday, 21 June 2008 13:28 (seventeen years ago)

yes, all those people did die

gabbneb, Saturday, 21 June 2008 13:34 (seventeen years ago)

one year passes...

http://www.ica.org.uk/Jarmusch%20in%20Context+22863.twl

this looks rad, londoners. chance to see the cameraman, they live by night, l'atalante and branded to kill.

rap band (schlump), Sunday, 29 November 2009 21:03 (sixteen years ago)

Wonder if I voted in this. Would've been Ghost Dog, probably.

Communi-Bear Silo State (chap), Sunday, 29 November 2009 22:13 (sixteen years ago)

if night on earth had a few votes in favour of how much fun it is, the results would be pretty much otm.

rap band (schlump), Sunday, 29 November 2009 22:28 (sixteen years ago)

seven months pass...

I didn't get dead man either. what was the point?

like a ◴ ◷ ◶ (dyao), Sunday, 11 July 2010 05:29 (fifteen years ago)

http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/acid-western/Content?oid=890861

the most horrifying moment in shallow grave (abanana), Sunday, 11 July 2010 05:36 (fifteen years ago)

still don't get it

like a ◴ ◷ ◶ (dyao), Sunday, 11 July 2010 06:23 (fifteen years ago)

good read! i like Dead Man, but i haven't seen it years. review will probably prompt a re-watch in the near future.

xpost

circa1916, Sunday, 11 July 2010 06:36 (fifteen years ago)

two years pass...

Add me to the list of those who didn't get Dead Man when it first came out--I remember drifting and fidgeting through the whole thing--but liked it a lot better tonight. (Saw it right after Imitation of Life...I won't pretend it was a double-bill--two separate theatres.) I wish Iggy Pop's bit of silliness weren't there--he's a needless distraction--and the series of fade-outs right at the start seemed excessive. But the violence and the overall mood registered this time, and there were a number of really beautiful shots. Liked the music fine. I'll have to mull over all the William Blake and millennial undercurrents, but they're evocative.

http://www.salon.com/1999/12/02/deadman/

clemenza, Wednesday, 8 August 2012 04:20 (thirteen years ago)

I love Dead Man but haven't seen it for years. My first viewing was with a friend who didn't really know anything about Jarmusch, and when we came out he said, "That was like a European movie about America." Which I think makes sense in ways he didn't even mean.

something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 8 August 2012 04:34 (thirteen years ago)

And I didn't know Marcus was a fan of My Twentieth Century. There's a movie that deserves its own thread, if there was any way to actually see the thing any more.

something of an astrological coup (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 8 August 2012 04:40 (thirteen years ago)

I remember being surprised when it showed up fairly high on decade-end polls, somewhere in the 10-20 range on a couple that I remember--it didn't seem to get a lot of attention on release. I can understand that better now; it does capture something. (Never heard of My Twentieth Century.)

clemenza, Wednesday, 8 August 2012 04:45 (thirteen years ago)

dead man and mystery train are my favs. love the dumb zombie movie too though i think it beefs the ending even within the looser parameters of the anti-comedy farce it's doing

ciderpress, Monday, 6 April 2026 19:46 (two months ago)

I loved the new one. I don't know if Father Mother Sister Brother is great Jarmusch, but what does great Jarmusch look like? How can we tell? Is this one better or worse than Mystery Train, Dead Man, Ghost Dog, or Only Lovers Left Alive? A lovely triptych, especially the Charlotte Rampling-Cate Blanchett-Vicky Krieps section.

The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 6 April 2026 19:57 (two months ago)

Parts of Dead Man have stuck with me in ways no other Jarmusch film did.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Monday, 6 April 2026 19:58 (two months ago)

idk Down By Law is perfect to me pacing wise. before prison and after prison. both parts cook.

kurt schwitterz, Monday, 6 April 2026 19:59 (two months ago)

i've rewatched dead man and ghost dog in the past few years, but i should go back to some of the other older ones. it's been a long time since i've seen mystery train.
i remember enjoying paterson a lot.

na (NA), Monday, 6 April 2026 20:19 (two months ago)

i guess the question is, has he ever made a bad movie? the only one i've seen that i disliked more than liked was the stooges documentary, but there are several i've never seen (broken flowers, limits of control, coffee and cigarettes, night on earth, the dead don't die, father mother sister brother)

na (NA), Tuesday, 7 April 2026 14:05 (two months ago)

Broken Flowers was dreadful and not even in a bad taste sort of way.

The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 7 April 2026 14:12 (two months ago)

I thought the new one was extremely middling and kind of shallow, but a) I recently developed an aversion to scenes where two people converse while driving so I started off rooting against the film, and b) I acquiesced to my friend's desire to see this, which means I ended up missing out on seeing The Secret Agent while it was in theatres and I'm still mad about that.

obvious old hat (rob), Tuesday, 7 April 2026 14:34 (two months ago)

Meanwhile I've grown to love movies with two people talking and driving. At any rate the second section's the best.

The Luda of Suburbia (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 7 April 2026 14:35 (two months ago)

I did immediately think of several counter examples after posting that :)

However, I found that opening leaden and clunky regardless of the setting, which probably then increased my disinterest in the subsequent driving & talking scenes. I do agree about the second section though -- that would have made a nice stand-alone short

obvious old hat (rob), Tuesday, 7 April 2026 15:12 (two months ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.