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Josh Safdie Movies

As one of the more unusual independent film success stories during the mid- to late 2000s, Josh Safdie grew up in a Manhattan home with a New Yorker mother and a cinema-obsessed European father, who translated his love of filmmaking to Josh and his brother by constantly filming them. In his teens, Josh founded an eight-member production collective called Red Bucket Films, then formally enrolled in the film production program at Boston University.
Safdie and company produced a number of shorts under the Red Bucket imprimatur, such as the twin 2007 efforts The Back of Her Head and We're Going to the Zoo, but took a step up in profile and recognition thanks to Josh's meeting (via a mutual acquaintance, video artist Casey Neistadt) with the handbag entrepreneur Andy Spade, co-founder of Kate Spade Handbags. At the time, Safdie wanted to obtain funding for a feature entitled Yeah, Get On My Shoulders; Spade agreed on the condition that Safdie first direct a short narrative, designed to sell handbags.
The directorial assignment on the handbag commercial was not entirely unprecedented, as Spade had extended similar work to many prior filmmakers, including Neistadt, but it yielded a far more unusual outcome in Safdie's case thanks to his determination and restless creative spirit. With Shoulders still in the works, the upstart accepted a second commercial assignment for Spade during the interim -- this one a short narrative advertisement about a free-spirited kleptomaniac (neophyte Eleonore Hendricks) with a penchant for stealing handbags. In Safdie's hands, the idea evolved by leaps and bounds from a brief short subject of several minutes in length to a low-medium budgeted feature, also to star Hendricks, with roughly the same storyline. When Spade and his business partner learned of this, they openly embraced the opportunities to branch off into film production and backed Safdie 100%. The gamble paid off: the finished feature, entitled The Pleasure of Being Robbed (produced, directed, and edited by the 24-year-old Safdie, and co-starring him as well), landed the Fortnight spot at Cannes, secured domestic distribution and a theatrical run through IFC Films, and drew innumerable critical praises and more than a passing comparison to the early directors of the French Nouvelle Vague. It also demonstrated the rise of a vital new American filmmaker. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi
2013  
 
Josh and Ben Safdie direct this documentary about Lenny Cooke, a basketball prodigy who for a variety of reasons when undrafted when he decided to go pro, beginning a series of seasons playing with various foreign basketball clubs and traveling professional teams. The filmmakers show how this probably superstar ended up barely a footnote in the history of the game. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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2010  
NR  
A barely competent father takes his children on a series of offbeat adventures in this comedy drama from the writing and directing team of Josh Safdie and Ben Safdie. Lenny (Ronald Bronstein) works as a projectionist at a revival theater in New York City and has been living on his own since his wife divorced him. Lenny often acts like an overgrown child, which makes things complicated when he has to look after his two young sons, Sage and Frey (Sage Ranaldo and Frey Ranaldo). Lenny finds himself spending two weeks with his kids, and he wavers back and forth between being a caring father and dragging them into situations where they don't belong; when Lenny is called in to work unexpectedly, the boys are given the run of the theater with chaotic results, and a sudden road trip to upstate New York proves little better than disastrous. Also screened as Go Get Some Rosemary, Daddy Longlegs also features Lee Ranaldo of the acclaimed indie rock band Sonic Youth in a supporting role -- he's also the father of Sage and Frey Ranaldo, who play Lenny's sons. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Ronald BronsteinSage Ranaldo, (more)
 
2010  
 
A man flounders in the wake of his mother's death, drifting through an increasingly surreal urban landscape as life seems to slip slowly through his fingers. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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2008  
 
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A free-spirited thief touches the lives of everyone she steals from in director Josh Safdie's tale of loneliness in the big city. Eleonore (Eleonore Hendricks) is attractive, fearless, and stealthy enough to lift the wallet of even the most alert and aware citizens of New York City. But while most folks view thieves as inherently selfish, Eleonore has a generous streak a mile wide. One day, after nabbing the purse of an unsuspecting stranger and adopting a litter of kittens she finds in an abandoned laundry bag, and enlists the aid of her friend Josh (Safdie) in locating the car that corresponds to a set of keys she recently stole. Once they find the car, Eleonore realizes that she doesn't even know how to drive it. But that small detail won't prevent the brash young criminal from chauffeuring Josh back to his home in Boston. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Eleonore HendricksJosh Safdie, (more)
 
2008  
 
Hopelessly oblivious, frustratingly tyrannical, and emotionally stunted, a woman suffering from a wide variety of personality flaws does her best to talk through two deeply destructive friendships. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Mary BronsteinAmy Judd, (more)
 
2007  
 
A sister and brother en route to the zoo find their trip taking an unexpected turn after picking up a strange hitchhiker. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Josh SafdieMickey Summer, (more)
 
2007  
 
Despite only having seen the back of her head in passing, a New England apartment dweller is smitten with a woman who lives three floors below in director Josh Safdie's quirky love story. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Josh SafdieJake Summer, (more)