Stranger Than Paradise

5.00
    Stranger Than Paradise
    1984

    Synopsis

    A Hungarian immigrant, his friend, and his cousin go on an unpredictable adventure across America.

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    Cast

    • John LurieWillie
    • Eszter BalintEva
    • Richard EdsonEddie
    • Cecillia StarkAunt Lotte
    • Danny RosenBilly
    • RammellzeeMan with money
    • Tom DiCilloAirline Agent
    • Richard BoesFactory Worker
    • Rockets RedglarePoker Player
    • Harvey PerrPoker Player

    Recommendations

    • 100

      Chicago Sun-Times

      It is like no other film you've seen, and yet you feel right at home in it. It seems to be going nowhere, and knows every step it wants to make. It is a constant, almost kaleidoscopic experience of discovery, and we try to figure out what the film is up to and it just keeps moving steadfastly ahead, fade in, fade out, fade in, fade out, making a mountain out of a molehill.
    • 100

      IndieWire

      Jim Jarmusch’s breakthrough film Stranger Than Paradise — famously described by its director as a neo-realistic black comedy in the style of an imaginary Eastern European director obsessed with Ozu and The Honeymooners — captures something essential about the American character: the contradictory desire to be anonymous and to be identified, to blend into the crowd and yet still stand out.
    • 100

      The A.V. Club

      There's more going on in the film's mundane moments than the excitement its heroes imagine is waiting beyond the horizon. They never find the postcard America they were promised, but there's a lot of beauty, and a lot of America, in the way they keep searching for it, never quite saying what's on their mind as they go.
    • 100

      Entertainment Weekly

      Jim Jarmusch’s minimalist meditation on a trio of misfits who wander across the U.S. Shot in crisp black and white, the film is a series of 67 single takes punctuated by moments of black screen.
    • 80

      The New York Times

      The film has no big scenes, and it takes a while to get the hang of it, but once you do, it's as funny as it is wise. The three lead performers are extremely good, never for a second betraying the film's consistently deadpan style.
    • 80

      Empire

      Jim Jarmusch tried to create the essential road movie and although he didn't manage that, he has still created a classic that captures perfectly the life of a drifter in New York.
    • 80

      Time Out London

      Not a lot to it, certainly, but the acting and performances combine to produce an obliquely effective study of the effect of landscape upon emotion, and the wry, dry humour is often quite delicious.
    • 80

      TV Guide Magazine

      A bleak but mordantly funny portrait of three aimless characters who discover that paradise isn't such an easy place to find.

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