
Prodcut Description: [More Information ...]
New York's opulent art and financial worlds collide when a stressed-out stockbroker meets a beautiful and cagey French actress...
Similar Products : [More Information ...] Sure Fire Director Jon Jost may have made a few enemies with the local homebuilder's association and the Mormon Church in this devastating 1993 psychological drama, but then again, hardly anyone has seen it. "Just a one-day drive" from the urban sprawl centers of California, the quiet and... |  Cache (Hidden) Academy Award®-winner Juliette Binoche (1997 Best Supporting Actress The English Patient) stars in CACH a psychological thriller about a TV talk show host and his wife who are terrorized by surveillance videos of their private life. Delivered by an anonymous stalker the tapes r... |  Scarface (Full Screen Anniversary Edition) In spring 1980 the port at mariel harbor was opened & thousands set sail for the usa. They came in search of the american dream. One of them found it on the sun washed avenues of miami wealth power & passion beyond his wildest dreams. He was tony montana but the world will rememb... |  Earth vs. the Flying Saucers (Color Special Edition) Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 01/15/2008 Run time: 167 minutes Rating: Pg13 |  WR: Mysteries of the Organism (Criterion Collection) What does the energy harnessed through orgasm have to do with the state of Communist Yugoslavia circa 1971? Only counterculture filmmaker extraordinaire Duan Makavejev has the answers (or the questions). His surreal documentary-fiction collision WR: Mysteries of the Organism begi... |
 Jean Renoir 3-Disc Collector's Edition (Whirlpool of Fate / Nana / Charleston Parade / La Marseillaise / The Doctor's Horrible Experiment / The Elusive Corporal) DISC 1 - Jean Renoir 2 Early Movies: LA FILLE DE L'EAU, NANA. DISC 2 - Jean Renoir Political period: LA MARSEILLAISE, + 2 short films: SUR UN AIR DE CHARLESTON, LA PETITE MARCHANDE D'ALLUMETTES. DISC 3 - 2 Later Movies: LE TESTAMENT DU DOCTEUR CORDELIER, LE CAPORAL EPINGLE |  Cabaret A female girlie club entertainer in weimar republic era berlin romances two men while the nazi party rises to power around them Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 02/14/2006 Starring: Liza Minnelli Helmut Griem Run time: 124 minutes Rating: Pg Director: Bob Fosse |  David Lynch's Inland Empire (Limited Edition Two-Disc Set) Studio: Wea-des Moines Video Release Date: 08/14/2007 |  Manhattan Woody Allen Diane Keaton Meryl Streep and Mariel Hemingway star in Woody Allen's extraordinary and funny film that explores the embattled life and loves of a successful New York comedy writer. The breathtaking cityscapes of Manhatten provide the ideal background for the lush musi... |  Quiz Show Dick goodwin discovers game shows are fixed: pretty boy wasp charles van doren is fed answers so he beats geeky jew herbie stempel. Studio: Buena Vista Home Video Release Date: 07/01/2003 Starring: John Turturro Ralph Fiennes Run time: 133 minutes Rating: Pg13 Director: Robert Redford |
Sure Fire Cache (Hidden) Scarface (Full Screen Anniversary Edition) Earth vs. the Flying Saucers (Color Special Edition) WR: Mysteries of the Organism (Criterion Collection) Jean Renoir 3-Disc Collector's Edition (Whirlpool of Fate / Nana / Charleston Parade / La Marseillaise / The Doctor's Horrible Experiment / The Elusive Corporal) Cabaret David Lynch's Inland Empire (Limited Edition Two-Disc Set) Manhattan Quiz Show
Reviews:
Not as bad as claimed
This is not the disaster some of the other reviews suggest. It is slow, and it is quite pretentious, but if you get into the rhythm of it, it is a worthwhile movie. Jost is no Eric Rohmer (even if the actress here played the lead role in "Boyfriends and Girlfriends"), but this film, set in Manhattan amidst both the art and high finance world (and with a Vermeer painting appearing predominantly, for no apparent reason), ends up being a quietly beautiful effort.
Its The Frame
This film appears ponderous, with its intermittent shots of marble floors & columns. The characters' references to art & literature seem forced. However these devices amount to the frame around their lives. Inside the frame they are very much alive-& trapped.The French girl,full of charm & intellect, is a self centered user of people - may she wander forever! Her girl buddy is relatively unsophisticated but actually a good person. And the lonely stockbroker so trapped by his life! Very real people that I liked - poignantly framed in a moment of time
A brave independent film
The presence of Vermeer in the art has always been powerful and many times neglected. His works seem to have a weird enchantment in all the viewers inside and outside the painting craft. The delicate equilibrium in the form and the sumptuous employment of the light and shadow seduce inmediatly the soul, the eye and the spirit. Salvador Dali, for instance, stated in a conference that Vermeer was his favorite painter. And it's interesting to remark how film makers so distant in styles as Greenaway (A zed an two noughts) and Riddley Scott (Blade runner), have shown Vermeers's paintings as admirable narrative devices in their respective scripts, as clever clues.The premise made by this talented independent director -Jon Jost-is setting in New York (Metropolitan Musseum) a young artist Frenchwoman and a stockbroker who meet in front of a Vermeer painting as a smart raising relationship.The european style (Wenders, Altman, Losey, Antonioni and Rohmer among the closest authors)developed by Jost, allows explore several issues, such as the mercenary underworld in art dealing, the hipocrisy beneath the surface, and above all the perceptions contrasts about how the art is considered as just another more market object.Francis Coppola told in 1981 in an interview, this bitter thought: "Ïf anybody thought that the art was just a wrench of market, then you could buy a Picasso, to cut it in two parts and sell both parts as if those of them were two Picassos".This is a very unusual movie, carefully filmed and cleverly directed.If you are a Vermeer admirer (as I do) and even you don't , you should not miss this movie. I recommend to read a remarkable essay about Vermeer written by Marcel Brion.
Jon Jost's All the Vermeers in New York
Jon Jost shoots a little New York film, and bores the heck out of America. The central story centers around French actress Anna (Emmanuelle Chaulet) falling for Wall Street money man Mark (Stephen Lack). Their courtship begins in the Vermeer room at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where Mark passes Anna a note. She meets him later with her roommate Felicity, who pretends to translate for Anna. Mark pursues her until she decides to go back to France, with Felicity, and Mark finally confesses his love in a tragic phone call. Yawn. This slow moving film is so boring I took three days to watch the eighty-seven minute thing. The central story takes forever. There are subplots that are brought up and dropped worse than any other film I have ever see. Gordon, the poor artist trying to borrow money from a gallery owner? Dropped. Felicity's dad using her name to make possibly illegal stock transactions? Dropped. Felicity and Anna's constantly rehearsing roommate? Dropped. The best scenes in the film involve Stephen Lack as Mark. All of his scenes just crackle, and he does some excellent ad-libs. His scene on one of the World Trade Center towers, as he talks about death while a jet plane can be heard over head (this was shot in the early 1990's) is creepy and fascinating. He held back too much in "Scanners," but here he is the only reason to sit through this muck. "All the Vermeers in New York" is like Woody Allen on his worst day. I wish Jost could have given us more, not bore.
All style. No substance.
I was extremely disappointed with "All the Vermeers in New York", a mid-80's film from French director/writer Jon Jost which was produced by American Playhouse (in case anyone was wondering, the film IS in English). First of, let me say that I am a big fan of movies dealing with the world of art, and there have been some great ones in recent years; "Pollock", "Maze", "I Shot Andy Warhol", "Sweet Thing", "Vincent & Theo", etc. I am also a big fan of arthouse/independent cinema, and even of films that most viewers would consider to be "slow moving". All that said, I STILL cannot find much to recommend in regards to "Vermeers"! Filmmaker Jon Jost has a photogpaher's eye for visuals and details, and there are plenty of lengthy static shots in this film that indeed look very artistic and "pretty",...but that is part of the problem. The film often seems more like a still-life slide show than a "motion picture", and Jost misses many opportunities to add some needed visual "life" to the film. As a writer and storyteller, I'm afraid Jost leaves a LOT to be desired! While there are three or four central characters, none of them are really devoloped or fleshed-out into people that we care about,...or even understand! Who are these people? What are their motive's? What drives their lives? Why should we spend 90 minutes of OUR lives watching them??? Unfortunately for his viewers, Jost's idea of "character devolopment" seems to be lengthy close-ups of the actor's expressionless faces not saying a word - and as a viewer, I desire a LOT more from a story than this! There is, I believe, a RIGHT way to make a slow-moving film. Take for instance Atom Egoyan's "Exotica"; a film where the story and characters slowly-unravel before your eyes as the writer/director peels back layers of information, and in the end, leaves the audience with a complete picture. The problem with "Vermeers" is that, unlike Egoyan's film, there is no "unvieling" of the story, no suspence, no building up of the characters, and nothing-in-particular driving the plot to an intesting conclusion. I have given the film 2 stars for Jost's considerable visual talents, but it dosen't even get a blip on the screen for it's shoddy storytelling!