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Jim Jarmusch is a model of stylistic consistency who emerged as a full-blown talent and erupts once a decadeStranger Than Paradise in the 80s, Dead Man in the 90s, The Limits of Control today.
An acutely self-aware, anti-psychological character study, The Limits of Controlfocuses on the archetype of the Hitman. Jarmusch sets his self-contained, catalytic anti-hero (French-Ivorian actor Isaach De Bankolé) in a semi-documentary landscape and contemplates his progress with a quasi-religious sense of awe.
Identified in the credits as the Lone Man, Jarmuschs protagonist exists only in terms of his unspecified mission, or his role in what is perhaps a conspiracy. The Lone Man is introduced in an overhead shot doing tai chi in an airport toilet stall, then taking a meeting in the first-class lounge. A few inexplicable aphorisms later, hes traveling through Spain by train, grooving on a landscape shot by Christopher Doyle and soundwashed in hyperdrone acid jazz (courtesy of the band Boris). Like everything Jarmusch, The Limits of Control is calibrated for cool.
The Lone Man is a creature of habit, defined by his idiosyncrasies (insisting on two espressos in separate cups) and his reserved response to his invariably eccentric contacts. All this killer need do is show up and acknowledge the password ("You dont speak Spanish, right?") to receive a coded message passed in matchbox and set off his contacts solo riff. De Bankolés voluble co-stars include Tilda Swinton (a refugee from Wong Kar-wais Hong Kong in blonde wig and matching Stetson), John Hurt (babbling about Bohemia, bohemians, and "an oddly beautiful Finnish film"), Gael García Bernal (in manic mode), and Bill Murray (identified as "The American" and channeling Donald Rumsfeld).
Madrid and next-stop Seville are filled with obvious spies. Its borderline risible when the Lone Man finds a naked girl with a gun (Paz de la Huerta) lolling on his hotel room bed or when Swinton begins holding forth on the nature of old movies: "Sometimes, I like it in films when people just sit there, not saying anything," she adds by way of acknowledging De Bankolés silence. Thats Jarmuschian humor. His movies are typically based on a series of whimsical two-handers: In The Limits of Control, these meet-cutes have been boiled down to a set of absurd, enigmatic repetitions. Led to a "closed" flamenco bar, the Lone Man watches a rehearsal in which the singer delivers dialogue from the movies first scene with such excessive stylization that it inspires the flicker of a smile on his normally inexpressive face.
By the time the Lone Man is given an ancient guitar, from which he removes a single string, and, told that "the Mexican will find youhe has the driver," travels to a forsaken town in the middle of nowhere, he might be wandering through the afterlife. The landscape goes through cosmic changes en route to a pueblo that looks like it was last inhabited by the cast of a spaghetti Western. But even as he ventures deeper off the map in a truck with the bumper sticker "La vida no vale nada" ("Life is worthless"), theres no missing the Lone Mans uncanny wardrobea succession of stylish suits with color-coordinated shirts that could hardly fit in his elegant, ridiculously small travel bag.
The Limits of Control is a shaggy dog story, but its leaner and less precious (and more beautiful) than the past few Jarmusch filmsnot to mention his last exercise in existential assassinitis, the 1999 Forest Whittaker vehicle Ghost Dog. The Lone Man traverses the empty streets and barren landscapes of an abstract thriller, glimpsing previously met characters (or their images), engaging in mysterious transactions (a fistful of diamonds here, an earful of Schubert there), and trafficking in the free-floating symbols of a surrealist poem. His steps are guided by picture postcards or red flowers found lying in some stone-paved alley. Tracked by (or following) the same black helicopter from city to city, chased by kids who ask if hes an American gangster, he lives in a world of allegory and myth.
Mission accomplished, the Lone Man ponders an Arte Povera white canvas and rope assemblage in Madrids Reina Sofía museum. What does it mean? The contents of the package are unknowable; the twine that wraps around its enigma is everything.
"Incantatory visuals"? Don't try to run if you can't walk, Skippy.
The famous Cuban song "La Vida No vale Nada" has verse after verse of examples of what life is worthless without--it's the opposite of cynical--ie. life is worthless if hearing the mortal cry of another doesn't touch my heart, life is worthless if others don't enjoy & love, etc. Just google the title & my name(that of a comparatively freethinking legendary cuban songwriter singer the filmmakers may possibly have known. It's a rallying song against oppression, personified in the view of the writer by US Imperialism--rather appropriate for the bunkered bigwig complaining about "spanish technology' in one scene.
Spike, did you watch it on your phone? Movies are auditory & visual; this one WAS like a dream experience both because of the incantatory visuals, often almost slower than life, paired with the sparse peopleless landscapes even in cities--hotel rooftop pool with no guests but the completely available naked woman, the empty streets surrounding cafe after cafe, not even a moped while the dreamer/viewer waits & watches a solitary walker purposefully seek out the only loner. A helicopter recurs. Angles are dizzying, images are framed. The loner pauses to notice. anthing out of place is a message--a postcard, a poster, a woman who is all curves in his round bed in his curvy hotel. And the music is just as sow and hallucogenic. "Are you interested in films, by any chance? I like really old films. You can really see what the world looked like, thirty, fifty, a hundred years ago. You know the clothes, the telephones, the trains, the way people smoked cigarettes, the little details of life. The best films are like dreams you're never sure you've really had. I have this image in my head of a room full of sand. And a bird flies towards me, and dips its wing into the sand. And I honestly have no idea whether this image came from a dream, or a film. Sometimes I like it in films when people just sit there, not saying anything."
two suits actually :)
sorry, but everything happens. not in action, though. go to hollywood movies, if it is too idiotic for you!
The scenery and photographer in the film were enchanting. The silence was assuring. The tai chi self controled main character enigmatic. Doyle with color and angles, Boris with music, and cryptic phrases of repeition were philosophical and meditative.
I sense the reviewer phoned his review in. There was one suit. There was no bumper sticker. "La vida no vale nada" was painted on the tailgate of the truck. The film, although occasionally interesting, had no value as well. Enigmatic film has been many times and usually signifies a director out of ideas. based on his films, I would say Jarmusch leads a boring life.
I sense the reviewer phoned his review in. There was one suit. There was no bumper sticker. "La vida no vale nada" was painted on the tailgate of the truck. The film, although occasionally interesting, had no value as well. Enigmatic film has been many times and usually signifies a director out of ideas. based on his films, I would say Jarmusch leads a boring life.
I can't believe that such boring and pretentious film received this praise from Hoberman. There is no analytical content in this article. There is only plot description. Readers, please save your money and your time. If you want to watch it, rent the dvd and fast forward the tedious and boring scenes as fast as you can and you would see repetitions of facts, "words", there are none and suits (only the Isaac Bankole's suits are changing colors).
Saw this masturbatory film at the Angelika. Possibly the most tedious, boring and insipid film Ive seen in the last five years. I actually had to walk out of the theater for a while in a fit of hysterical laughter. NOTHING HAPPENS in this film. There is no conceivable story, no fleshed out characters, a mute lead, and a completely underwhelming finish. It seems to capture the moments between moments, which, with all being said, leaves us with NOTHING but repetition, idiotic dialogue and no narrative line. What a piece of high concept garbage.
Uh J, from reading your review, I fail to understand what makes this movie worthy of praise apart from the fact that it is made by Jarmusch. Saying that it's better than his last 2 or 3 does not make you a critic. Do you suspend any analytical thinking when confronted with a cult brand? All I got from your review is a retelling of a few scenes and a gushing mythologizing of a supposedly great indie filmmaker. Instead of your "quasi-religious sense of awe" why not apply the same cynicism as you would to Hollywood? And where did you come up with the simplistic claim that he puts out a good movie every decade? It just seems lazy in addition to being completely untrue. Personally, I think Jarmusch lost the plot like Wenders, and is riding on past fame while putting out putrid, pointless films. Just because The Million Dollar Hotel is "calibrated for cool" doesn't make it a good movie. Next time, when confronted with the question of "What does it mean?" don't be afraid to do your job and critize, instead of telling me it's an enigma wrapped in a puzzle.
What a treat to see a director do his thing and pull it off. This Anti-Hollywood style film is like a painting and before you know it the credits roll ...very mesmerizing rivals Dead Man....Biker Billy
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