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Permanent Vacation

United States

1980

75 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
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DIR Jim Jarmusch

PROD Jim Jarmusch

SCR Jim Jarmusch

DP Tom DiCillo, James A. Lebovitz

CAST Richard Boes, Ruth Bolton, Sara Driver, María Duval

ED Jim Jarmusch

MUSIC Jim Jarmusch, John Lurie

Synopsis

Jim Jarmusch made his directorial debut with this episodic profile of one troubled hipster trying to make sense of his life. Aloysius Parker (Christopher Parker), known to his friends as “Allie,” is a young man with a damaged family background (his mother is in a mental institution and his father has gone missing) and an inability to sleep, causing him to dream while he’s awake. After a troubling encounter with his girlfriend (Leila Gastil) and a frustrating visit with his mother, Allie drifts through a strangely under-populated New York City, crossing paths with a sharp-suited street musicians (John Lurie), a middle-aged jazz fan (Frankie Faison), a disturbed Latin woman (Maria Duval) and a popcorn girl at a movie theater (Lisa Rosen) who’s fascinated with Eskimos. A chance encounter with a woman with a vintage Ford Mustang gives Allie the opportunity to escape the chaos around him. While Permanent Vacation made the rounds of European film festivals after its completion in 1980, it was all but ignored in the United States, and it wasn’t until Jarmusch released Stranger Than Paradise in 1984 that his star began to rise on the independent film scene.

(Source: http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:105934)

Director

Jim_jarmusch

Jim Jarmusch

With his trademark shock of white hair and ultra-cool rock star persona, Jim Jarmusch is the archetypal auteur of American independent film. Born on January 22, 1953, in Akron, OH, Jarmusch was the son of a former film critic for the Akron Beacon Journal. In University, he went to Paris as an exchange student and spend most of his time at the Parisian Cinemas. Upon his return to New York, Jarmusch transferred to Columbia University, where, though he eventually received a degree in English literature. With no film experience, he was accepted into New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts and soon found himself a teaching assistant to legendary maverick filmmaker Nicholas Ray. Ray helped him get funding for his thesis project, Permanent Vacation (1980). Though the film was later released to critical acclaim, his professors were underwhelmed by his final project and Jarmusch never got a degree from N.Y.U.

Jarmusch’s break came with his next film; the 30-minute short eventually… read more

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Josh Richardson

6Dec09

I'm glad to see that this lovely film is appreciated here.  
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aberracja

13Nov09

masterpiece!  

gino

4Jul09

Intimate. Beautiful. Real. Raw. Genuine. Authentic. Touching. Dark. Funny. Brilliant. Depressing. Insane. Awkward. Perfect.  

Danila Usov

19Feb09

As a thesis film, this is a dream of any film student. Or at least should be.  

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Untitled

By Joriah Goad on June 14, 2009

I’ll open by saying that I admire the work of Jim Jarmusch greatly, even considering that most of his films are basically the same film tuned with slightly different stories, all drifters, all loners…  read review

Untitled

By Jung Ji Sung on April 25, 2009

“A tourist on permanent vacation.” This line could really serve as a summation of Jarmusch’s underlying theme in his body of work thus far. And certainly, there are traces of his signature here that…  read review

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