Dead Man (1995)

There is 1 reply in this Thread which has previously been viewed 2,700 times. The latest Post () was by ethanedwards.

Participate now!

Don’t have an account yet? Register yourself now and be a part of our community!

  • DEAD MAN


    DIRECTED & WRITTEN BY JIM JAMUSCH
    MUSIC BY NEIL YOUNG
    PANDORA FILMPRODUKTION
    JVC ENTERTAINMENT NETWORKS
    NEWMARKET CAPITAL GROUP
    12 GUAGE PRODUCTIONS
    MIRAMAX



    INFORMATION FROM IMDb


    Plot Summary
    Dead Man is the story of a young man's journey, both physically and spiritually, into very unfamiliar terrain. William Blake travels to the extreme western frontiers of America sometime in the 2nd half of the 19th century. Lost and badly wounded, he encounters a very odd, outcast Native American, named "Nobody", who believes Blake is actually the dead English poet of the same name. The story, with Nobody's help, leads William Blake through situations that are in turn comical and violent. Contrary to his nature, circumstances transform Blake into a hunted outlaw, a killer, and a man whose physical existence is slowly slipping away. Thrown into a world that is cruel and chaotic, his eyes are opened to the fragility that defines the realm of the living. It is as though he passes through the surface of a mirror, and emerges into a previously-unknown world that exists on the other side.
    Written by Anonymous


    Cast
    Johnny Depp ... William Blake
    Gary Farmer ... Nobody
    Crispin Glover ... Train Fireman
    Lance Henriksen ... Cole Wilson
    Michael Wincott ... Conway Twill
    Eugene Byrd ... Johnny 'The Kid' Pickett
    John Hurt ... John Scholfield
    Robert Mitchum ... John Dickinson
    Iggy Pop ... Salvatore 'Sally' Jenko
    Gabriel Byrne ... Charlie Dickinson
    Jared Harris ... Benmont Tench
    Mili Avital ... Thel Russell
    Jimmie Ray Weeks ... Marvin, Older Marshal
    Mark Bringelson ... Lee, Younger Marshal
    Mike Dawson ... Old Man with 'Wanted' Posters
    Billy Bob Thornton ... Big George Drakoulious
    Michelle Thrush ... Nobody's Girlfriend
    Gibby Haynes ... Man with Gun in Alley (as Gibby Haines)
    Richard Boes ... Man with Wrench
    George Duckworth ... Man at End of Street
    Thomas Bettles ... Young Nobody #1
    Alfred Molina ... Trading Post Missionary
    Daniel Chas Stacy ... Young Nobody #2
    Todd Pfeiffer ... Man #2 at Trading Post
    Leonard Bowechop ... Makah Villager #1
    Cecil Cheeka ... Makah Villager #2
    Michael McCarty ... Makah Villager #3
    Steve Buscemi ... Bartender (uncredited)


    Directed
    Jim Jarmusch


    Writing Credits
    Jim Jarmusch ... (written by)


    Produced
    Karen Koch ... co-producer
    Demetra J. MacBride ... producer


    Music
    Neil Young


    Cinematography
    Robby Müller


    Trivia
    Gary Farmer would reprise his role as Nobody in the later Jim Jarmusch film Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999).


    Robert Mitchum's final big screen appearance.


    Nobody (Gary Farmer) can be heard several times to exclaim, "Hootka!" or "Huht-kah!" According to Farmer, it's not an actual word but slang for, "What the fuck?!" or simply, "Fuck!"


    Nobody tells William Blake, "Drag your wagon and plow over the bones of the dead." This is a passage from William Blake's "Proverbs of Hell". It is also a lyric from Tom Waits song "How's It Gonna End," who stars in several of Jim Jarmusch's films.


    Robby Müller's black and white cinematography was influenced by the work of photographer Ansel Adams.


    The names of the two marshals that Blake (Johnny Depp) kills are Lee and Marvin, an homage to Lee Marvin.


    This is the third time Johnny Depp and Iggy Pop are involved in the same movie after Cry-Baby (1990) and Arizona Dream (1992). Iggy Pop wrote and performed 3 songs with Goran Bregovic for Emir Kusturica's Arizona Dream.


    The lines "The vision of Christ that thou dost see / Is my vision's greatest enemy" that Nobody says to the trading post missionary are from William Blake's "The Everlasting Gospel".


    The lines "Some are born to sweet delight and some born to the endless night" are also lyric of a song entitled "End of the Night" by The Doors.


    The lines "Every night and every morn / Some to misery are born / Every morn and every night / Some are born to sweet delight" are from William Blake's poem "Auguries of Innocence".


    The hat that Johnny Depp wears in the movie is a John Bull Topper.


    The line said by Nobody, "The eagle never lost so much time as when he submitted to learn from the Crow," is also a William Blake quote, from the proverbs of Hell in "The Marriage of Heaven and Hell".


    Billy Bob Thornton's character is named Big George Drakoulious. George Drakoulias is a musician and has produced music for The Black Crowes and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. Jared Harris' character is named Benmont Tench. Benmont Tench is a member of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.


    The character Thel is also taken from a William Blake poem called "The Book of Thel".


    The passage Salvatore Jenko reads from the Bible is from 1 Samuel 17:46, "This day will the LORD deliver thee into mine hand; and I will smite thee, and take thine head from thee ...".


    Included among the "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die", edited by Steven Schneider.


    Crazy Credits
    At the end of the credits, "Whahappan?" appears just before the soundtrack information.


    In between the Set Production Assistants and First Assistant Editor is the "Hangin'-out Guy," Nemo Labrizzi.


    This Film is Dedicated to the Memory of Dick Peiffer and Paul D. O'Brien


    Goofs
    Anachronisms
    While the three bounty hunters are waiting in the office, Conway asks Johnny for tobacco, then dismissively says that Johnny isn't even old enough to smoke. There would have been no laws governing tobacco use by minors at the time this movie was set, and persons as young as nine or ten might have smoked or chewed tobacco without raising much comment other than that tobacco was considered a bad habit in the young. The thought that Johnny was too young to smoke should not have even crossed Conway's mind. (It is also possible that Conway was simply commenting on how extremely young Johnny is in general--that he's too young even to have picked up such a habit.)


    Continuity
    When Thel is shot, her head changes position in William Blake's arms between shots.


    When William and Nobody are riding horses, William's jacket is hanging off his shoulders, in the next shot, his arms are in the sleeves, and a few shots later, his jacket is once again on his shoulders.


    The straps on Thel's dress while she's talking to Charlie.


    Blake buys a half-empty bottle in the bar. Minutes later, when he offers Thel a drink outside, the bottle is filled almost to the neck.


    After William Blake and Nobody walk down to the trading post tent, William takes off his hat and is holding it in his right hand. When the camera angle changes, he is holding it in his left hand.


    William Blake and Nobody come upon a trading post tent. When Nobody walks down the hill towards the tent, smoke from the chimney is blowing towards him, but when the camera angle changes, it's blowing away from him.


    Crew or equipment visible
    As Blake follows Nobody through a canyon, both on horseback, a crewmember is briefly but clearly seen crouched and walking between the two horses.


    Factual errors
    In the opening titles, after the train ride, Billy Bob Thornton's last name is incorrectly spelled "Thorton".


    Memorable Quotes


    Filming Locations
    Flagstaff, Arizona, USA
    Camp Verde, Arizona, USA
    Virginia City, Nevada, USA
    Hoover Dam, Arizona-Nevada Border, USA
    Applegate River, Oregon, USA
    Cave Creek, Arizona, USA
    Coast, Oregon, USA
    Coconino National Forest, Arizona, USA
    Grants Pass, Oregon, USA
    Peaks Ranger District, Flagstaff, Arizona, USA
    Peoria, Arizona, USA
    Phoenix, Arizona, USA
    Rogue River, Oregon, USA
    Sedona Ranger District, Sedona, Arizona, USA
    Sedona, Arizona, USA
    Takilma, Oregon, USA
    Beacon Rock, Columbia River Gorge, Washington, USA
    Boulder Dam, Nevada, USA
    Columbia River Gorge, Washington, USA
    Los Angeles, California, USA
    Neah Bay, Washington, USA
    Niagara Falls, New York, USA
    Venice Canals, Venice, Los Angeles, California, USA
    New York, USA

    Best Wishes
    Keith
    London- England

    Edited 2 times, last by ethanedwards ().

  • Dead Man is a 1995 American Western film written and directed by
    Jim Jarmusch. It stars Johnny Depp, Gary Farmer, Billy Bob Thornton,
    Iggy Pop, Crispin Glover, John Hurt, Michael Wincott, Lance Henriksen,
    Gabriel Byrne, and Robert Mitchum (in his final film role).


    The film, dubbed a "Psychedelic Western" by its director,
    includes twisted and surreal elements of the Western genre.
    The film is shot entirely in black-and-white.
    Neil Young composed the guitar-seeped soundtrack with portions
    he improvised while watching the movie footage.
    It has been considered by many to be a premier postmodern Western,
    and related to postmodern literature such as Cormac McCarthy's novel Blood Meridian.
    Like much of Jarmusch's work, it has acquired status as a cult film.




    Cultural allusion
    There are multiple references in the film to the poetry of William Blake. Exaybachay aka Nobody recites from several Blake poems, including Auguries of Innocence, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, and The Everlasting Gospel. When bounty hunter Cole warns his companions against drinking from standing water, it references the Proverb of Hell (from the aforementioned Marriage), "Expect poison from standing water". Thel's name is also a reference to Blake's The Book of Thel. The scenes with Thel culminating in the bedroom murder scene visually enact Blake's poem, "The Sick Rose: "O rose, thou art sick!/ The invisible worm/ That flies in the night,/ In the howling storm,/ Has found out thy bed,/ Of crimson joy,/ And his dark secret love/ Does thy life destroy." The film's soundtrack album and promotional music video also features Depp reciting passages from Blake's poetry to the music composed by Neil Young for the film.


    Although the film is set in the 19th century, Jarmusch included a number of references to 20th century American culture. Benmont Tench, the man at the campsite played by Jared Harris, is named after Benmont Tench, keyboardist for Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. Billy Bob Thornton's character, Big George Drakoulias, is named for record producer George Drakoulias. The marshals chasing Blake are named Lee Hazlewood and Marvin Throne-berry, after Lee Hazlewood and Marv Throneberry, and it is also an allusion to the American actor Lee Marvin.Nobody's name ("He Who Talks Loud, Saying Nothing") is a reference to the James Brown song Talkin' Loud and Sayin' Nothing. Michael Wincott's character is shown in possession of a Teddy bear. Also, when asked his name, Exaybachay states, "My Name is Nobody." My Name is Nobody was an Italian Western film from 1973 starring Henry Fonda and Terence Hill.


    Portrayal of Native Americans
    Dead Man is generally regarded as being extremely well researched in regard to Native American culture.


    The film is also notable as one of the rather few films about Native Americans to be directed by a non-native and offer nuanced and considerate details of the individual differences between Native American tribes free of common stereotypes. The film contains conversations in the Cree and Blackfoot languages, which were intentionally not translated or subtitled, for the exclusive understanding of members of those nations, including several in-jokes aimed at Native American viewers. The Native character was also played by an Indigenous American actor, Gary Farmer, who is a Cayuga.


    Reception
    Johnny Depp and Jim Jarmusch at the 1995 Cannes Film Festival.
    The film was entered into the 1995 Cannes Film Festival.


    Soundtrack
    Neil Young recorded the soundtrack by improvising (mostly on his electric guitar, with some acoustic guitar, piano and organ) as he watched the newly edited film alone in a recording studio. The soundtrack album consists of seven instrumental tracks by Young, with dialog excerpts from the film and Johnny Depp reading the poetry of William Blake interspersed between the music.




    User Review


    plot lacks meaning?
    21 November 2007 | by jeffreytaos (Korea (Republic of)



    Best Wishes
    Keith
    London- England

    Edited 2 times, last by ethanedwards ().