Overview
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Release Date:
26 August 2005 (Iceland)
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Tagline:
Sometimes life brings some strange surprises.
Plot:
As the devoutly single Don Johnston is dumped by his latest girlfriend, he receives an anonymous pink letter informing him that he has a son who may be looking for him. The situation causes Don to examine his relationships with women instead of moving on to the next one, and he embarks on a cross-country search for his old flames who might possess clues to the mystery at hand.
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Awards:
4 wins
&
11 nominations
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User Comments:
A subtle, quiet, quirky, and largely interpretable drama
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- ADCO/United Rentals lifts and cranes (as United Rentals)
- AON/Albert G. Ruben Insurance Services insurance brokers (as AON/Albert G. Ruben)
- ARRI filmed with: ARRIFLEX Cameras
- American Playback Images (I) courtesy of (cartoon clip "Always Gets His Man")
- Bell Racing special thanks
- Big Film Design title design
- Bowtie special thanks
- Budget Rent-a-Car special thanks (as Budget Rent A Car)
- Camera Service Center cameras and lenses (as CSC)
- Camera Service Center electric equipment (as CSC)
- City National Bank production banking
- Classic Restorations of Sloatsburg special thanks (as Classic Restorations of Sloatsburg, NY)
- Cosmo's Cosmos special thanks
- Creative Mega Playground dailies telecine
- Criterion Collection, The special thanks
- DFN Gallery special thanks
- Daewoo Export Co. Ltd. special thanks (as Daewoo)
- Decca Records soundtrack
- Dell Books artwork courtesy of ("Stranger In Town" by Brett Halliday) (as Dell Publishing)
- Democracy Now special thanks
- Entertainment Partners payroll services
- Essex Fine Art Gallery special thanks
- Estate of Roger Tory Peterson courtesy of: Field Guide Art
- Evan M. Greenspan music clearance
- Fifty-Six Hope Road Music special thanks (as Bob Marley Estate)
- Film Finance completion bond (as Film Finances)
- Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz production legal (as Frankfurt Kurnit Klein & Selz PC)
- Granada International courtesy of (footage from "The Private Life Of Don Juan")
- Grandview Pictures special thanks
- Grant Wilfley Casting background casting
- Hudson River Stage, The stage (as Hudson River Stages)
- International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) this picture made under the jurisdiction of (as I.A.T.S.E.)
- JFA accounting: production/post-production
- Jaffe Entertainment product placement
- Janus Films special thanks
- Las Venus special thanks
- MapQuest.com used with permission (MapQuest and MapQuest.com name, logo and maps © 2004)
- Mercedes Benz USA special thanks (as Mercedes Benz)
- Moet & Chandon special thanks
- Natexis Banques Populaires production funding
- New Jersey Film Commission special thanks
- New York City Mayor's Office of Film, Theater & Broadcasting, The special thanks (as New York City Mayor's Office For Film, Theater, And Broadcasting)
- New York Grip Truck grip equipment (as New York Grip)
- New York State Governor's Office for Motion Picture & Television Development special thanks
- Pee Wee's Cycle of Riverdale, NJ special thanks
- Phaidon Press special thanks
- Post Factory NY editing facility (as Post Factory)
- Premiere Caterers catering
- Primedia special thanks
- Sound One Corporation sound services (as Sound One Corp.)
- T-Mobile special thanks
- Taschen special thanks
- Technicolor New York film dailies (as Technicolor NY)
- Tommy Hilfiger special thanks
- Westchester County Film Commission, The special thanks
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Dead Flowers (USA) (working title)
Untitled Jim Jarmusch Project (USA) (working title)
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Rated R for language, some graphic nudity and brief drug use.
Runtime:
106 min
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1
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Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Jim Jarmusch said he wrote the role exclusively for
Bill Murray, of whom he is a big fan. He planned another film to work with him, then changed his mind and then changed his mind again: Bill Murray is appearing in
The Limits of Control (2009), Jim Jarmusch's next film.
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Goofs:
Errors in geography: As can be evidenced by the symbols on the airport signs (the letters A, B, and C, individually, are in the center of rounded triangles, designating sections of the airport) Newark Airport (NJ) was used for each of the airport scenes, although Murray's character was supposedly going to many different places in the US.
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Quotes:
[
first lines]
Sherry:
I pretty much have all my stuff.
[
picks up mail]
Sherry:
Looks like you got a love letter from one of your other girlfriends.
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Soundtrack:
Dreams I'll Never See
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FAQ
How does it end?
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Related Links
Don Johnston, that's "with a T," has been left by his latest girlfriend and has also received an anonymous letter from what can only be a former flame. It states that he has a 19 year-old son who is looking for him. With the persuasion of an odd, but well meaning neighbor, he sets out to figure things out in his slow and uneventful life.
With a large focus on sensationalism these days, even in dramas, even in good dramas, like History of Violence and Crash, there is always usually that element of the extraordinary. Huge life changing experiences that not only change the protagonist, but everyone around them. Inner racial tensions shoot out like a shell out of a cannon or a violent past hits a character like a freight train. But here, Jim Jarmusch gives us... nothing. A boring man who could care less about anything. Who just drives and dully interacts with his former girlfriends. Barely showing any sort of exterior emotions to even some truly unexpected surprises. Like Murray in the lead, Jarmusch chucks in a lot of subtleties here and there. And like Murray in the lead, these subtle hints of what is really going on hardly lead anywhere unless the viewer decides they do.
It also works out as anything but a turn off or anticlimax (holycrap, did I just say that?), but rather gets you to think back to what you saw. And it REALLY points out the impact of relative perception to events past with those complex creatures known as humans. --- 8/10
Rated R, but really has minimal profanity and brief nudity.