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Broken Flowers
Broken Flowers

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Actors: Nicole Abisinio, Frances Conroy, Julie Delpy, Ryan Donowho, Alexis Dziena
Studio: Universal Studios
Category: DVD

List Price: $14.98
Buy New: $0.88
You Save: $14.10 (94%)



New (84) Used (91) Collectible (2) from $0.85

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 207 reviews
Sales Rank: 20767

Format: Ac-3, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 106
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6

MPN: MCAD28477D
ISBN: 1417070110
UPC: 025192847721
EAN: 9781417070114
ASIN: B000BX8R10

Theatrical Release Date: 2005
Release Date: January 3, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.

Similar Items:

  • Lost in Translation
  • Coffee and Cigarettes
  • Dead Man
  • The Squid and the Whale (Special Edition)
  • Rushmore

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
When a mysterious pink letter informs don johnston that he may have a 19 year old son he travels to the homes of 4 former lovers where he comes face-to-face with the errors of his past & possibilities of his future. Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 09/04/2007 Starring: Bill Murray Frances Conroy Run time: 106 minutes Rating: R

Amazon.com
Bill Murray gives yet another simple, seemingly effortless, yet illuminating performance in Jim Jarmusch's Broken Flowers. Don Johnston (Murray, Lost in Translation, Rushmore) receives an anonymous letter telling him that he has a 19 year old son who's looking for him. Don only decides to investigate at the prompting of his neighbor Winston (the indispensable Jeffrey Wright, Shaft, Basquiat), who not only tracks down the current addresses of the possible mothers, he plans Don's entire trip down to the rental cars. Almost against his will, Don finds himself knocking at the doors of four very different women (Sharon Stone, The Quick and the Dead; Frances Conroy, Six Feet Under; Jessica Lange, Sweet Dreams; and Tilda Swinton, The Deep End) who were once his lovers. Part road movie, part detective story, part existential meditation, Broken Flowers is even more minimalist than most Jarmusch movies (Stranger Than Paradise, Dead Man, Mystery Train)--anyone looking for an easy resolution should look elsewhere. But for anyone willing to let a movie be a poem as much as a story--i.e., let it observe behavior without explaining it--Broken Flowers will offer a wealth of mysteries, gestures, and Bill Murray's soulful eyes. It's a movie that's wonderfully eloquent about what's not being said. --Bret Fetzer


Customer Reviews:   Read 202 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The Great Hoax   December 25, 2008
Great film of Bill Murray moping. Sort of like his Lost in Translation persona, or maybe even him in Rushmore. He's a middle-aged man in a track suit, he's had several women in his life. The day that one of them leaves him he gets a letter; he doesn't know which one of his ex-girlfriends it's from, but she says in the letter that she had his baby 20 years ago. With the help of his Ethiopian neighbour (cue opportunity to have Ethiopian jazz in the soundtrack) he works backwards and comes up with five names. So he goes to visit several of them to try and solve the "mystery." There's not much mystery, but there's an opportunity to film several episodes. The first one is the best - Sharon Stone, and her "daughter" Lolita, played by a magnetically horny Alexis Dziena. It goes downhill from there. A lot can happen to people in 20 years - some end up in loveless marriages with real estate developers, some become psychics, while others slum it as biker chicks. But life is long and good things can come of it if you're Bill Murray and you don't take things too seriously or get delusional about a son you may or may not have. There's always tomorrow. The film uses quite good songs in its soundtrack (including, briefly, Sleep), and the fantastic "There Is An End" by The Greenhornes with Holly Golightly. Great boogie woogie retro rock with cool old guitar plucking. Crazy, dad, crazy...


4 out of 5 stars What's not to like about Bill Murray?   December 20, 2008
Bill Murray's recent movies (Lost in translation, Broken flowers... etc) are amazing and fun to watch. I sense some sort of personal isolation and cheerful depression in all of them. This one was no exception. The whole movie was around figuring out the puzzles of the present time that are stemming from the past. The viewer is urged not to worry about the future so much. It's not here yet, but the past is making present and that's what this movie is talking about. I really felt for Don Johnston through the whole movie. In some instances, especially when he was beaten by the bikers, I loudly said "oh poor man". Then Bill Murray's acting is cool and this is one of his finest act recently. Looking forward to Murray's future movies.


3 out of 5 stars Solid   September 8, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Bill Murray is the closest thing to a modern Charlie Chaplin, not in being a filmmaker, but in creating an onscreen persona. His `dour schlemiel' is every bit as iconic as Chaplin's tramp. He has played the same basic character in films from Groundhog Day to Lost In Translation to his latest incarnation in Jim Jarmusch's latest film Broken Flowers. This film is one of those works of art that should be filed under `nice attempt', but is ultimately a failure. And it fails for the simplest of reasons that all bad films fail: a bad screenplay, which was written by Jarmusch himself.
Murray plays a former Lothario named Don Johnston, who made a fortune in personal computers, watches The Adventures Of Don Juan on tv (for all call him a Don Juan), and whose girlfriend Sherry (Julie Delpy) is leaving him. His Ethiopian friend and neighbor Winston (Jeffrey Wright), is a mystery writer and amateur detective. On the day Sherry leaves Don gets an unsigned letter in a pink envelope, typed in red ink, from a former girlfriend saying that twenty years ago he fathered her son, and he may be searching for him. Don is is pushed by Winston to search for the writer of the letter. The first of his ex-girlfriends he visits is Laura (Sharon Stone). She's a NASCAR widow, whose daughter Lolita (Alexis Dziena), is a gorgeous nymphet who nakedly tries to seduce Don (wow, what a shock!). She does not succeed, but Laura does (ah, film!- only in such a medium could a guy like Murray, and a cipher of a character like Don, have a prayer of bedding Sharon Stone- or her onscreen lookalike). Don, in Murrayvian fashion, never tells her his real reason for the trip, then later fantasizes about....of course, Lolita- yes, it's really that heavyhanded in its attempts at symbolism.
His second ex-lover is Dora (Frances Conroy), who, with her husband Ron (Christopher McDonald), are realtors of pre-fab homes. Again Murray equivocates and does not reveal the reason for his trip to see her. The nest woman on his list is New Age pet psychic Carmen (Jessica Lange), whose lesbian assistant (Chloe Sevigny) resents Don's intrusion. Carmen's so fruity that Don does not even attempt to really tell her why he stopped by. His fourth ex-lover is Penny (Tilda Swinton), a biker chick whose boyfriend punches Don out when she goes psycho just a minute after meeting him. A fifth lover is now dead, and he returns to his posh home, and Winston, unsatisfied....Others have detailed the rest of the film.... Jarmusch is still a daring director, but he seems to be in mid-life crisis mode, not knowing what he will do next, or what he should do.



3 out of 5 stars Broken Flowers   September 1, 2008
The start of it was boring and it is depressing to watch for those who just broke up with their mates.


5 out of 5 stars Beautiful.   August 25, 2008
I am a big fan of Jarmusch and Bill Murray and when the two come together we see a great character named Don Johnston come to the screen. When auteur Jarmusch focuses on an actor he tends to give them the freedom they need to really bring a character to life. Like all of Jarmusch's films this one is filled with "in-between" moments, an obsession that Jarmusch has had and made obvious in other works such as Coffee and Cigarettes and Night on Earth, the moment that most film makers would cut away from but in Broken Flowers many of them become very meaningful and and interesting scenes.

One scene of this film will always stay with me because of the emotion Murray is able to convey as he sits under a tree. The short scene is perhaps the best acting I have ever seen from Bill Murray and his ability to convey emotion seems to shine in this film.

One thing that really amazes me about Broken Flowers is the amount of interpretation this film provides. The film has something for each viewer providing they are patient with it. This film is not one you should watch when you are tired and trying to relax because the film depends on viewer involvement. I own this film and every time I've watched it I have found different personal interpretations. In fact so much that I have had late night conversations and made very great films who reported it as one of their favorite films when I asked them what kind of movies they liked.

Like most Jarmusch films this film I believe is rooted in literature (Jarmusch did major in English at college) and I think the names of the various characters that Murray meets will show you the irony that Jarmusch provides.

This film made a serious impression on me and became reasons that I have seen all his work and study film. This was my intro to his work and I believe one of his easier films to watch much like Dead Man. I throughly enjoyed the soundtrack and its placement in the film. You will only get out of this movie what you put into it but if you think deeply on the small moments in the film you'll find it a rewarding experience.


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