Harmony Korine Movies
Christened "the future of American cinema" by
Werner Herzog, writer/director
Harmony Korine matured from film's youngest credited screenwriter (for 1995's
Kids) into one of its most controversial independent filmmakers.
Born in 1974 in Bolinas, CA,
Korine is the son of documentary filmmaker Sol Korine. He spent his early years in Nashville, TN, before moving to New York City to live with his grandmother. A solitary teenager,
Korine frequented revival theaters, watching classic films by
Cassavetes,
Herzog,
Godard,
Fassbinder, and
Alan Clarke. He studied English at New York University for one semester before dropping out to pursue a career as a professional skateboarder.
Korine was skating with friends in Washington Square Park when he caught the eye of photographer
Larry Clark.
Korine showed
Clark a screenplay he had written about a teenager whose father takes him to a prostitute. Impressed, the photographer asked him to compose a script about his everyday life. Within three weeks,
Korine wrote
Kids, a film about 24 hours in the sex- and drug-filled lives of several Manhattan teenagers. Directed by
Clark and starring
Leo Fitzpatrick and
Korine's on-again-off-again girlfriend
Chloe Sevigny, critics called
Kids both a brilliant wake-up call to America and a blatant work of teen exploitation.
Korine caused another stir with his directorial debut,
Gummo (1997), the story of two friends growing up in a remote Ohio town that cannot recover from a devastating tornado that hit decades earlier. Numerous critics thought his use of hand-held video, Super 8, and Polaroids was genius.
Herzog and
Bernardo Bertolucci even wrote
Korine fan letters after seeing the film. Others called
Gummo boring, absurd, and exploitative. New York Times reviewer Janet Maslin went so far as to label
Gummo the worst film of the year, despite the fact that it earned top awards at both the Venice and Rotterdam Film Festivals.
After
Gummo's release,
Sonic Youth tapped
Korine to direct the video for their song "Sunday." At the filmmaker's insistence, the video starred
Macaulay Culkin and his then-wife
Rachel Miner.
Korine turned the experience into a book, The Bad Son (a twist on the title of
Culkin's 1993 vehicle
The Good Son), which consisted of manipulated photographs taken on the set of the video. The work eventually served as a companion piece to
Korine's one-man art exhibition at the Taka Ishii Gallery in Tokyo. Barely a year later,
Korine further disgusted critics with "The Diary of Anne Frank (Part Two)," an experimental work that used three movie screens to alternately show such disturbing images as a mentally handicapped man in a soiled diaper and the burying of a dead dog. After completing his first novel, A Crackup at the Race Riots,
Korine began a project titled "Fight Harm," a documentary-style film which followed him as he harassed people on the streets until they beat him up. The director, who often said he would die for the cinema, hoped to make a cross between a
Buster Keaton vehicle and a snuff film, but after only six fights, he was hospitalized and forced to abandon the project.
Korine drew the inspiration for his next feature,
Julien Donkey-Boy (1999), from his uncle, a paranoid schizophrenic. A month before the picture went into production, director
Thomas Vinterberg asked
Korine to start the American New Wave and join the Dogma 95 brotherhood. Filmed according to the Dogma 95 manifesto, in chronological sequence with hand-held cameras in natural light,
Julien Donkey-Boy starred
Ewen Bremner,
Herzog,
Sevigny, and
Korine's grandmother,
Joyce. The project earned as much praise and disapproval as
Korine's earlier films, setting the stage for his long-awaited reteaming with
Clark for 2002's Ken Park. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, Rovi

- 2012
-
A motivational speaker (Val Kilmer), a time-traveling Russian scientist, and a group of young adventurers in Poland all seek the elusive secrets of the fourth dimension in this three-part anthology from directors Harmony Korine, Aleksei Fedorchenko, and Jan Kwiecinski. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- 2012
- R
Four college coeds find their Florida spring break taking an unexpectedly violent turn after falling in with a local gangster in this surreal black comedy from Harmony Korine (Mister Lonely, Trash Humpers). Left broke and alone on campus as their classmates head to Florida for some fun in the sun, coeds Candy (Vanessa Hudgens), Brit (Ashley Benson) and Cotty (Rachel Korine) steal a car, rob a local diner with plastic guns, and head south with their devoutly religious girlfriend Faith (Selena Gomez) in tow. But when the girls are thrown in jail following a police raid on a beachfront apartment, it looks like the party is over until wild-eyed drug dealer Alien (James Franco) inexplicably posts their bail. Sensing danger, Faith boards a bus bound for school as her three friends fall into a dangerous cycle of drugs and debauchery. Later, a scary run-in with Alien's bitter rival prompts yet another of the girls to hightail it back to campus, leaving the remaining two to embrace their dangerous new lifestyle with reckless abandon. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- 2009
-

- 2009
- NR
Americana goes rancid in writer/director Harmony Korine's tale of three elderly cretins who brutalize dolls, molest fauna, and force themselves on garbage cans. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- 2008
- NR
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Filmmaker Aaron Rose celebrates the independent spirit of D.I.Y. (do-it-yourself) culture in this documentary detailing how a group of like-minded American artists emerged from the underground in the early 1990s to have an enormous impact on the worlds of fashion, film, art, music, and pop culture in general. With virtually no connection to the mainstream art world, the ten artists featured in Beautiful Losers somehow managed to become the strongest creative voices of their generation. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- 2007
- NR
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When a Michael Jackson impersonator (Diego Luna) living in Paris falls for a Marilyn Monroe impersonator (Samantha Morton) during a performance at a retirement home, the lovestruck pair retreats to a seaside castle in the Scottish highlands populated by a commune of reclusive impersonators. Earning a living can be a difficult endeavor in the City of Lights, and in order to make ends meet, one man has turned to mimicking the King of Pop. One day, while doing the moonwalk in an old folks home, Michael meets a beautiful Marilyn Monroe look-alike. When Marilyn suggests that Michael join her in traveling to the Scottish Highlands and move into a castle populated entirely by celebrity doppelgangers, the would-be gloved one readily accepts her invitation. Shortly after arriving at the castle, Michael and Marilyn find the commune preparing for their first-ever gala -- a lavish affair featuring appearances by Abe Lincoln, the Three Stooges, Buckwheat, Shirley Temple, Madonna, Sammy Davis Jr., and Charlie Chaplin. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Diego Luna, Samantha Morton, (more)

- 2005
- R
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Filmmaker Gus Van Sant wrote and directed this meditation on stardom and its costs, inspired in part by the life and death of rock musician Kurt Cobain. Blake (Michael Pitt) is the leader of an influential alternative rock band who has unexpectedly won a large degree of fame and fortune. Depressed and unsure of what to do with himself or his success, Blake wanders about the run-down mansion he calls home and the visits the woods nearby. While a handful of friends live with Blake, he prefers to avoid them, as they often seem more interested in money or help with their music than in his friendship; meanwhile, Blake is also confronted by a handful of fans, his agent, and a gentleman who sells advertising space in a telephone directory and has no idea who Blake is. As Blake goes through the motions of his day, he tries to decide what he should do next, and what might finally free him from his ennui. Shot and edited in the same languid, low-key manner as his films Elephant and Gerry, Last Days also stars Lukas Haas, Asia Argento, Scott Green, Ricky Jay, and Harmony Korine. Kim Gordon of the band Sonic Youth also appears in the film, while her husband and bandmate Thurston Moore was a consultant for the musical score; both were friends of Kurt Cobain and toured in tandem with Nirvana on several occasions. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Michael Pitt, Lukas Haas, (more)

- 2002
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Filmmaker Larry Clark reunites with Kids screenwriter Harmony Korine, with some additional directorial assistance from cinematographer Ed Lachman, for this look at a group of troubled teens and their guardians living in Southern California. The film opens at a skate park, where a troubled character takes his own life; it then proceeds to chronicle the somewhat-interrelated lives of his classmates. The audience is introduced to Tate (James Ransome), a young man living in relative misery with his board-game-playing grandparents. Also tormented by his living situation is Claude (Stephen Jasso), a quiet, shy teen constantly henpecked by his brutish father (Wade Andrew Williams). Meanwhile, the vapid Shawn (James Bullard) occasionally trades verbal spars with his mother, in between leaving the house for sex sessions with his girlfriend's mom. Finally there is Peaches (Tiffany Limos), living alone with her devoutly religious father as she covertly experiments with her boyfriend (Mike Apaletegui). Though Ken Park played at such festivals as Toronto and Telluride in the fall of 2002, it would languish on the shelf for months and months afterward, as its explicit content made finding a U.S. distributor near-impossible. ~ Michael Hastings, Rovi
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- Starring:
- James Ransome, Tiffany Limos, (more)

- 1999
- R
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In his second directorial effort, writer/director Harmony Korine embraces the hyper-realist aesthetic of Lars Von Trier's Dogma 95 film movement, which mandates handheld photography using only available lighting, among other restrictions. As in the controversial Gummo (1997), Korine abandons traditional narrative for a series of vignettes about bizarre characters, in this case centered on Julien (Ewen Bremner), a schizophrenic who works in a school for the blind. Julien lives at home with his pregnant sister Pearl (Chloe Sevigny); his brother Chris (Evan Neumann), who wrestles in his spare time; and their violent father (Werner Herzog), who slaps his children around, hoses them down with water, and offers to pay Chris ten dollars to dress up in his late mother's clothes and dance. Eventually Julien escapes from his home and interacts with people on the street (some of whom, reportedly, were not professional actors and had no idea that Bremmer was an actor playing a scene). ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ewen Bremner, Chloë Sevigny, (more)

- 1997
- R
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In this elliptical ensemble piece, which marks the directorial debut of indie bad boy Harmony Korine, the teens of tornado-scarred Xenia, OH, kill cats, tape their boobies, arm-wrestle, bathe, cross-dress, huff glue, avoid perverts, pay to have sex with retarded girls, lift makeshift dumbbells to the strains of Madonna's "Like a Prayer," fight, cuss, shave their eyebrows, undergo cancer treatment, euthanize senior citizens, and pee on passing cars. A hallucinatory barrage of images and scenarios with little in the way of traditional plot, Gummo has been variously described as a surrealist joke, a visual poem, and a worm's-eye view of white-trash suffering. The main characters include Solomon (Jacob Reynolds), who sells cat carcasses to a middleman who procures them for use at a local Chinese restaurant; his mother (Linda Manz), who teaches him to tap dance while reminiscing about her dead husband; Tummler (Nick Sutton), a mullet-haired local sex symbol; a midget (Bryant L. Crenshaw); a pair of boy-crazy, bleach-blond sisters named Dot (Chloe Sevigny) and Helen (Carisa Bara); a slut with a lump in her breast (Lara Tosh); a group of drunken louts; and Bunny Boy (Jacob Sewell), who wanders the town enigmatically in a pair of long pink ears. In between scenes of these characters enacting their bizarre routines, Korine intersperses impressionistic and quasi-documentary scenes with voice-over narration that ranges from incest memoirs to arty dialogue along the lines of "He's got what it takes to be a legend: He's got a marvelous persona." Shot just outside Nashville, TN, Gummo includes costume designs by Korine's then-girlfriend, Chloe Sevigny, who also plays Dot and who previously starred in the Korine-scipted, Larry Clark-directed Kids. Jacob Reynolds would go on to appear in Getting to Know You, though few of the director's other discoveries have appeared on film since. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jacob Reynolds, Nick Sutton, (more)

- 1995
- NR
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Kids offers a bleak, unblinking view of a group of vacuous, thoughtless New York City teens in their ceaseless quest for sex, drugs, and trouble. The film primarily follows Telly (Leo Fitzpatrick), who, having just realized the conquest of his latest virgin, brags that by day's end he will claim one more. While he and his friends brag to each other about their sexual exploits, Jenny (Chloë Sevigny) describes her own less-than-romantic encounter with Telly. Soon after the conversation, she learns that Telly, the only boy with whom she has slept, has infected her with the AIDS virus. Devastated, she sets out to find him and share the news. Meanwhile, Telly has set his sights on Darcy (Yakira Peguero), a lovely young girl whom he invites for a skinny dip at the local pool. Together with his friends, Telly drags Darcy along, and the entire crew jump the fence after hours. There he presents his now-familiar spiel which Darcy naïvely accepts, and the scene is set for disaster as the group heads back to a vacant apartment for an evening of sex, booze, drugs, and debauchery. Jenny finally locates Telly at the impromptu party and rushes to confront him, although she may be too late to save the next virgin in line from sharing her fate. ~ Jeremy Beday, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Leo Fitzpatrick, Justin Pierce, (more)