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#1 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I am a big fan of indie cinema. While browsing some catalog titles I came across this movie. When I watched the trailer on youtube I was immediately hooked to the visuals and soundtrack which was played during the trailer. It was super stylized and some high quality cinematography was evident from the trailer. Then I read Pro-B's review and cant help myself but ordering this movie.
![]() Surprisingly, I didn't get anything about this movie here on this site. In spite of Pro-B's perfect score there is not a single user review or discussion about this movie. I want to know that all of you who have seen it how good it is? Thanks. Last edited by Scottie; 08-17-2017 at 04:01 AM. |
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#6 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I enjoyed DOWN BY LAW. It's off-beat, quirky, with interesting characters, nice B&W cinematography, overall a good indie film. However, I liked Jarmusch's MYSTERY TRAIN quite a bit better (also on Criterion), and DEAD MAN (not Criterion) as much or even more than that one.
I really need to see more Jarmusch, as I've liked all I've seen of his. |
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Thanks given by: | kashif (07-24-2014) |
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#7 | ||||
Blu-ray Samurai
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#9 |
Banned
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Down By Law was just ok, IMO! I didn't think it was all that great of a movie, and it was nothing spectacular about it, as everybody claimed. I watched it once, and I had no desire to see it again. I would have rented first, before paying $25.00 or more for a blind buy. You may like it, (that's if you like strange, and unusual movies). To me, Down By Law is a forgettable film! The general public, and movie critics have a tendency to overrate, and overpraise these movies, and when you see them for yourself, it's like what the hell?
Last edited by slimdude; 07-25-2014 at 05:14 PM. |
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#10 |
Blu-ray Duke
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I saw this film several years ago and thought it was good, but definitely not great.
It has gorgeous black and white photography and a few chuckle-worthy moments spread throughout the story, but somewhere around the 45 minute mark it really started to feel like crawling through molasses. That being said, I'm actually considering buying it during the Barnes and Noble 40% off sale this week. Been so long since I've seen it, it almost feels like a blind buy. Maybe I've changed since the first time. Can anyone convince me to buy it or not buy it? |
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#16 |
Blu-ray Duke
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I like you.
Last edited by Ray Jackson; 12-20-2016 at 05:39 AM. |
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#18 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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![]() ![]() On the seedy nighttime streets of New Orleans, Jack, a small-time pimp played by John Lurie, and Zack, an unemployed disc jockey played by Tom Waits, are framed for separate crimes and placed together in a jail cell, where they are eventually joined by Roberto, an endlessly cheerful Italian tourist, played by Roberto Benigni, who has been arrested for manslaughter. When their new cellmate, who speaks limited English, shows Jack and Zack an escape route, the three of them take off into the expansive Louisiana bayou country. As these wildly disparate individuals struggle to avoid capture in the swamp, they form an unlikely friendship. The low-budget black-and-white 1986 cult classic, Down by Law, the third feature-length release from director Jim Jarmusch, broadened the scope of the indie filmmaker after his first two features, Permanent Vacation (1980) and Stranger Than Paradise (1984), both of which primarily took place in New York City. This time around, cinematographer Robby Müller, whose remarkable visual style graced such films as Repo Man and Paris, Texas, makes the settings into characters in and of themselves. The shadows of the French Quarter street corners take on a noir sensibility, a getaway in a subterranean tunnel conjures comparisons with The Third Man, and the bayou waterways recall older prison escape films like The Defiant Ones. Sparse jazz music, courtesy of Lurie, whose work with the band, The Lounge Lizards, complimented his acting career, adds atmosphere to the proceedings, while two songs from the brilliant 1985 Tom Waits album, Rain Dogs, bookend this screen story. There is no such thing as a boring movie. There are only boring people. As with other Jarmusch works, many viewers may lose patience with his brand of low-fi minimalism in Down by Law, but I could have watched the dialogue between our three antihero protagonists for hours. Waits, whose vocal style in his songs has always sounded to me like the Cookie Monster on a multi-day eating binge, is strangely captivating to watch as he slouches in the middle of any given place, and his garish shoes during an early scene are instrumental in setting the stage for his character. Lurie, whose 1950s gangster clothing styles are for the ages, is similarly effective. Of course, Benigni, who was new to America, is the wild card spark that really sets the story in motion, and his facial expressions shape the tone of the final half of the narrative. Be on the lookout for Ellen Barkin (Sea of Love), Billie Neal (Jacob's Ladder), and Nicoletta Braschi (Life is Beautiful) as women who figure into the lives of the main players. I love how this third Jarmusch effort comes across like a greatest hits of 1950s film noir and 1950s prison movies. All the while, however, it does not lose any of the uncanny coolness that brings adventurous audiences to his other works. This Criterion Blu-ray, which has been languishing in my still-unwatched stack for far too long after my only previous exposure being the old DVD edition, is one of the label's best presentations of a black-and-white film. The details of both the Orleans nightlife and the swamp wilderness have an entrancing immediacy. Right now, I'm listening to the extended Jarmusch audio interview, and I'll be plowing through the rest of the supplements tonight. Last edited by The Great Owl; 06-17-2019 at 12:24 AM. |
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#19 |
Banned
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I could never respect anyone who consider DOWN BY LAW to be anything less than a masterwork. It's Jarmusch's magnum opus, and the three leads are terrific. Too slow? Out.
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Thanks given by: | nitin (06-17-2019), The Great Owl (06-17-2019) |
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