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Jon Jost Movies

Maverick experimental filmmaker Jon Jost was among the most innovative and influential independent directors in contemporary cinema; dubbed "the American Godard" by critics, his singular creative approach -- equal parts elliptical narrative sensibility, ravishing visual style, and potent socio-political commentary -- emerged as one of the most unique and provocative voices of its time. Born in Chicago, Jost was the product of a military upbringing, and was raised in areas of the globe ranging from Kansas to Japan to Germany. Expelled from college in 1963, he made his first 16mm short subjects a short time later; a self-taught filmmaker, he not only wrote and directed all of his subsequent feature work, but also served as his own photographer and editor.
In 1965, Jost was sentenced to serve over two years in prison for charges of dodging the draft; upon his release he immersed himself in political activism, co-founding the Chicago arm of the leftist film production and distribution group Newsreel. He made his first feature-length film, Speaking Directly: Some American Notes, in 1974; shot on a budget of just 2,500 dollars, it was a fiercely political essay touching on points spanning from Jost's interpersonal relationships to the United States' relationship with the rest of the world, most specifically Vietnam. Equally intriguing was the picture's visual range, which varied from extended takes to baroque camera angles to even animated sequences. Long takes were again the hallmark of 1977's Last Chants for a Slow Dance, a portrait of a killer's drive through Montana starring Tom Blair, a familiar face in much of Jost's later work.
Jost's next effort, 1978's Chameleon, offered an atypically conventional narrative concerning the exploits of a L.A. cocaine dealer; still, the film was a critical success, winning "best of the festival" honors at the U.S. Film Festival. In 1981, he returned with Stagefright, a highly experimental work produced for West German television; two years later, Jost helmed Slow Moves, an improvisational piece shot in just under four days starring actors who'd never met prior to filming. Angel City, a surreal riff on the detective genre, followed in 1984; Jost then fell silent until 1987, resurfacing with Bell Diamond, another improvisational drama filmed in Butte, MT, with local actors. A year later, he released the essay Uncommon Senses (aka Plain Talk & Common Sense), a kind of Reagan-era update to Speaking Directly filmed during a cross-country journey.
Also in 1988, Jost delivered Rembrandt Laughing, an abstract comedy/drama set in San Francisco exploring the day-to-day lives of a group of friends; 1990's sublime All the Vermeers in New York is its companion piece, a study of similar themes and ideas set on the opposite side of the continent. Nestled between the two films was 1990's Sure Fire, a disturbing and deeply personal work ironically dedicated to the director's own father. In 1991, Jost was the subject of a complete retrospective held at the Museum of Modern Art; other honors included being named the first recipient of the John Cassavetes Award for lifetime achievement handed out at the Independent Spirit Awards. After two more films -- The Bed You Sleep In and the vicious road movie Frameup, both from 1993 -- Jost relocated to Europe to live and work. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi
2008  
 
The confused young veteran of a convoluted war is generously taken in by a host who longs to receive confirmation for his selfless act in director Jon Jost's meditation on the lingering effects of the Iraq War. Jason may be young, but he's seen things that would shake a man twice his age. Having served his country dutifully by fighting in Iraq, the fresh-faced war veteran returns stateside to Portland, Oregon and begins walking the streets in search of a home. Local denizen Chris recognizes the sacrifice that Jason has made for his country, and kindly offers the wandering vet a place to rest his weary body. Trouble arises, however, when Chris demands that Jason adapts to the house rules, and Jason begins to realize that his volatile emotions can no longer be contained. This film is the third installment in a trilogy of experimental features by avant-garde pioneer Jon Jost, about the years of George W. Bush's presidency - following Homecoming but preceding Parable. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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2008  
 
Pioneering independent filmmaker Jon Jost offers a pointed metaphor for the crimes of the George W. Bush administration in this experimental drama. Jim (Ryan Harper Gray), a cocky man in a cowboy hat, leaves his wife on a whim and hits the road, catching a ride with Eddie (Tyler Messner), a stranger who has lost his driver's license and needs someone to drive his car. As the two men cruise down a cartoon highway, they sing songs, swap stories and talk about their love of freedom until Jim suddenly rapes and murders Eddie. The story then shifts to the relationship of two curious people -- a farmer (Stephen Taylor) keeps a woman who cannot speak (Rachael LeValley) as a slave, tying her legs together while he struggles to unknot a mass of rope. Personal and sexual tension colors the interaction between the farmer and his captive until Jim unexpectedly shows up. Parable, the third installment in an informal trilogy by Jost about the Bush years (following Homecoming and Over Here) was an official selection at the 2010 Cinequest Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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2008  
 
In 2008, American independent filmmaker Jon Jost traveled to South Korea, where he became a professor of graduate studies in the film department at Yonsei University in Seoul. In collaboration with two of his students, Moon Si-Hyun and Lee Sang-Woo, Jost helped create this three-part comedy-drama about the many guises of love. In Karma, Lee Sang-Woo directs himself in the leading role as a man who can't find his soul mate until he discovered a discarded mannequin and falls in love with the dummy. Moon Si-Hyun's segment, The Silence, concerns itself with a man who speaks at length about his spouse, but she only laughs or speaks in his memories -- in the present, she never utters a word. And Mr. Right, Jost's contribution, is a blunt portrait of a man who wants to get out of a failing relationship at any cost. Love In The Shadows was an official selection at the 2009 Rotterdam International Film Festival; Jost's film has also been screened separately as a short subject. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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2004  
 
A contemporary American family fractures and gradually disintegrates, in this bleak, heavy and somber domestic drama from avant-garde pioneer Jon Jost (All the Vermeers in New York). Keith Scales stars as Jeff, a husband and father living and working as a real estate agent in dead-end Newport, Oregon, with his wife Mattie (Kate Sannella and 26-year-old son Chris (Ryan Harper Gray) nearby. Initially, all seems well, but appearances are deceptive in this case - and within a short time, fissures in the placid surface become evident: Chris is actually an unemployed slacker, co-habitating with (and living off of) his much younger girlfriend (Kat Eastman); meanwhile, a despairing Mattie hits the bottle, and Jeff's business begins to fall to pieces when Mattie fails to take critical papers to the bank. Not long after Chris's girlfriend unexpectedly dumps him, and Chris begins seeing a local therapist (Steve Taylor), we learn that Chris is actually Jeff's stepson. Jeff's biological son, Steve, is stationed in Iraq. And when Steve returns- not alive and well, but in a transfer tube - his death and funeral push Jeff, Mattie and Chris to the point of complete emotional destruction. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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2000  
 
American experimental filmmaker Jon Jost traveled to Rome to create this highly individual look at the architecture of the city. Muri Romani offers a mosaic, non-narrative view of Roman buildings, focusing on the details of their materials -- cracked surfaces, paint, wear, vandalism -- while the ambient sounds of their neighborhoods provides the audio track. Shot on high-definition video, Muri Romani was shown at the 2000 Mill Valley Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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1994  
 
This Italian film explores the terrible effects of dishonesty and graft on Italy. The work does not follow a traditional plot, but instead follows the characters as they give their opinions about the state of Italy. A large part of the film focuses upon Costanza, a landlady who cannot through out her dead-beat tenant Cecilia because she has not legally declared the rent she receives as income. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Eliana MiglioLucia Gardin, (more)
 
1993  
 
Made on short ends of film left over from The Bed You Sleep In, Frameup is a freewheeling road comedy about a pair of dimwitted lovers on the run. Ricky-Lee (Howard Swain), a two-bit criminal prone to spouting lengthy, obscenity-laced soliloquies, meets Beth-Ann (Nancy Carlin), an airheaded waitress with a weakness for romance novels, at the diner where she slings coffee. Immediately smitten, she joins him on a meandering journey across the Pacific Northwest -- punctuated by the occasional robbery -- and on into California, where the couple dream of heading to the sunny beaches of Los Angeles. Ricky-Lee's ineptitude catches up with him eventually, however, and their trip is cut short when a convenience store robbery goes awry. ~ Tom Vick, Rovi

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1993  
 
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In this independently produced drama, a timbermill owner is having great difficulty sustaining a livelihood due to overcutting and peculiarities of the international trade situation. Despite the damaging effect his mill has on the local environment, he appears to be someone who really enjoys the unspoiled wilderness, because he goes fly-fishing whenever he can. His troubled life edges veers into deeper waters when his daughter sends him a letter in which she accuses him of incest. Whether her story proves to be true or not, it is certain that his life is now ruined forever, as are the lives of those around him. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Ellen McLaughlin
 
1992  
R  
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A gentle film critic hooks up with a violent drifter in this HIV-positive road movie, which marked the emergence of writer/director Gregg Araki into the art house mainstream. Jon (Craig Gilmore) has just learned he has the virus that causes AIDS. Still in a state of shock, he stumbles through his usual routine -- until he meets Luke (Mike Dytri), a hunky, gun-toting hitchhiker who has just stolen a car from a pair of homicidal lesbians and shot a trio of would-be gay bashers. Against his better judgment, Jon lets Luke stay at his place and soon finds himself drawn into the nihilistic stranger's world; it doesn't hurt that Luke is also HIV-positive and hot to get inside Jon's pants. Things take a Bonnie and Clyde turn when Luke kills a policeman. The pair go on the lam, first to San Francisco, then all over the western United States. Jon keeps his best friend, Darcy (Darcy Marta), apprised of his situation via a series of ever more infrequent collect calls. But as the road trip continues, Jon becomes increasingly disillusioned with Luke's belief that since they're doomed to die, they should lead consequence-free lives. Like Araki's later movies, The Living End is peppered with pop culture detritus and features a soundtrack heavy on industrial and alternative music -- in this case Psychic TV, Coil, and Fred Gianelli. Marta is a veteran of Araki's earlier Three Bewildered People in the Night, while several other cast members, including Gilmore, would go on to appear in the director's Totally F***ed Up. The Living End's many cameos include performance artist Johanna Went, Eating Raoul director Paul Bartel, Warhol associate Mary Woronov, and Peter Grame, star of the obscure European film Das Gluck Beim Haendewaschen. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi

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Starring:
Mike DytriCraig Gilmore, (more)
 
1990  
 
From experimental filmmaker Jon Jost comes this romantic drama comprised of mostly improvised scenes. Emmanuelle Chaulet plays Anna, a struggling French actress in New York who meets an overworked financial broker named Mark in the Vermeer Room at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Anna resembles one of Mark's favorite paintings, so he asks he out for coffee. From there, the two struggle to overcome their personal baggage and attempt to allow themselves to fall in love. Director Jost was awarded the Caligari Film Award at the 1991 Berlin International Film Festival for this film and Sure Fire. ~ Matthew Tobey, Rovi

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Starring:
Emmanuelle ChauletStephen Lack, (more)
 
1990  
 
Like Last Chants for a Slow Dance, Jon Jost's Sure Fire features Tom Blair in a dark, tragic character study. Blair plays Wes, a small-time real estate tycoon with big plans to lure urban Californians to his rural Utah town with the promise of cheap vacation homes. Wes applies his scheming business sense to every part of his life, from deciding on a gift for his wife to paying off his friend Larry's (Robert Ernst) debts to keep him under his thumb. The film culminates during a hunting trip, when Wes' troubled relationship with his teenage son, Phillip (Phillip R. Brown), leads to a shocking end. ~ Tom Vick, Rovi

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Starring:
Tom BlairRobert Ernst, (more)
 
1989  
 
The title refers to a rare etching of Dutch artist Rembrandt. Jon A. English plays a young musician who expresses his love for former girl friend Barbara Hammes by presenting her with a Xeroxed copy of the Rembrandt etching. Though Hammes is touched, she doesn't want to get back together with English. And that's what passes for a plot in this collection of loosely related visual anecdotes, recording the separate day-to-day existences of English and Hammes. Devotees of director Jon Jost will uncover profundities in every scene; those who aren't so taken by Jost will scratch their heads and wonder what all the shouting is about. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Jon A. EnglishBarbara Hammes, (more)
 
1988  
 
 
 
1987  
 
Set in a barren Montana industrial town, Bell Diamond stars Marshall Gaddis as Jeff, a depressed Vietnam veteran whose marriage is crumbling because of his inability to produce children. Early scenes establish the quiet tension between Jeff and his wife, Cathy (Sarah Wyss). When Cathy decides she can't take it anymore, she leaves him and goes to stay at a friend's house. The rest of the film alternates between scenes of each of them coping with their separation. Cathy, feeling trapped, decides to leave town, while Jeff spends his time wandering the grounds of an abandoned mine with his friends, drinking and talking. Through their conversations it becomes clear that Jeff's emotional problems stem from his experiences in Vietnam ("Jeff got killed over there in 'nam and he doesn't even know it," says one friend), and that he and his friends are all still trying to adjust to life after returning from the war. Late in the film, Jeff ends up at the top of a tower at the mine called Bell Diamond, and his friends have to talk him out of jumping. Cathy does eventually return, but her reunion with Jeff brings with it a surprising twist that ends the film on a decidedly ambiguous note. ~ Tom Vick, Rovi

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Starring:
Marshall GaddisSarah Wyss, (more)
 
1984  
 
Slow Moves -- an extremely low-budget contemporary film noir produced, written and directed by independent filmmaker Jon Jost -- tells the story of two strangers, Jeff (Marshall Gaddis) and Julie (Roxanne Rogers) who meet on the Golden Gate Bridge and fall in love. They have no money and wander across the country in a beat-up car. Jeff eventually begins robbing back-roads stores, a decision that ultimately leads to tragedy. The film was shot in only 4 1/2 days on an amazing budget of only $8000. While based on an interesting premise, and possessing an intelligent plot, the film suffers from the lack of chemistry between the lead characters. But, this highly unusual, low-budget film is interesting if only to observe the ingenuity of its director Jost, as he substitutes character and dialogue for more costly effects. ~ Linda Rasmussen, Rovi

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Starring:
Roxanne RogersMarshall Gaddis, (more)
 
1983  
 
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An alcoholic, part-time Santa Claus who runs a small Death Valley café chases his daughter to California she runs off with a rebellious punk rocker in this semi-surreal, anything goes road film featuring performances by legendary punk acts Flipper and The Mutants. Ed Nyland and his daughter (Carolyn Zaremba) eke out a meager existence in the desert thanks to Ed's out of the way café and some part time work as a department store Santa. Now Ed's daughter has set her sights on San Francisco, but daddy's little girl is going to have to run fast and far if she truly hopes to escape. As Ed sets out in hot pursuit of his runaway princess and her punk rock Romeo, he encounters a series of eccentric characters including a power-mad politician (Lowell Darling) determined to turn the Unites States into one enormous National Park, an ex-convict donning a space alien mask (Dick Richardson), and various politicians and priests who are passionately pushing for a limited nuclear war. Along the way, punk rock legends Flipper and The Mutants perform, and Willie Boy Walker hits the sidewalks to conduct some man-on-the-street interviews. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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1983  
 
Filmed in Berlin in 1981, Stage Fright has been described as "an essay" by its creator, Jon Jost. The film stars Jenny Newman as an aspiring actress. Outwardly calm and collected, Jenny's true self is unleashed when she assumes her stage character. It is then we learn that she has the potential to be a homicidal psycho-and she wastes little time acting on her impulses (at least, this is the generally accepted synopsis; Jon Jost is seldom this linear). Originally lensed in 16 millimeter, this largely adlibbed 75-minute character study was blown up to 35mm for theatrical exhbition. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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