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Mala Noche

United States

1985

78 Min
Black and White
English
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
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DIR Gus Van Sant

PROD Gus Van Sant

SCR Gus Van Sant

DP John Campbell

CAST Tim Streeter, Doug Cooeyate, Ray Monge, Nyla McCarthy, Sam Downey, Bob Pitchlynn, Eric Pedersen, Marty Christiansen, Bad George Connor, Don Chambers, Walt Curtis

MUSIC Creighton Lindsay

SOUND Pat Baum

Synopsis

With its low budget and lush black-and-white imagery, Gus Van Sant’s debut feature Mala Noche heralded an idiosyncratic, provocative new voice in American independent film. Set in Van Sant’s hometown of Portland, Oregon, the film evokes a world of transient workers, dead-end day-shifters, and bars and seedy apartments bathed in a profound nighttime, as it follows a romantic deadbeat with a wayward crush on a handsome Mexican immigrant. Mala Noche was an important prelude to the New Queer Cinema of the nineties and is a fascinating time capsule from a time and place that continues to haunt its director’s work. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Gus_van_sant

Gus Van Sant

A director who is capable of crafting both deeply unconventional independent films and mainstream crowd-pleasers, Gus Van Sant has managed to carve an enviable niche for himself in Hollywood. Since debuting in 1985 with Mala Noche, Van Sant has become one of the premiere bards of dysfunction, populating his films with a parade of hustlers, junkies, psychopathic weather girls, homicidal teens, and troubled geniuses.

The son of a traveling salesman, Van Sant was born in Louisville, KY, on July 24, 1952. One constant in the director’s early years was his interest in painting and Super-8 filmmaking. Van Sant’s artistic leanings took him to the Rhode Island School of Design in 1970, where introduction to Avant-Garde cinema quickly inspired him to change his major from painting to cinema. After mobving to LA, Van Sant became fascinated by the existence of the marginalized section of L.A.‘s population, especially in context with the more ordinary prosperous world that surrounded them… read more

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David Ehrenstein

13Dec09

This is where I discovered Gus. The critics award I got him encouraged on-the-fence finance to back "Drugstore Cowboy" and the rest is history. Tim Streeter's perfomance is superb, and he has made several very great films since.   
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andres

13Oct09

is it bad that the best film from gus van sant, is his first one? its just so heart breaking... being in love is a bitch.  
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Jim W

14Sep09

This would be a really good film if the acting wasn't so bad. But it is interesting to see how terribly Van Sant directed the actors in this movie and how he was able to pull brilliant performances out of non-actor casts in his recent Elephant and Paranoid Park.  

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Mala Noche

By gino on November 23, 2009

Mala Noche is, by far, Gus van Sant’s most provocative Film, and in my opinion, his best. It’s black and white visuals are stunning and create a beautiful picture of the lower-working class in the…  read review

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By M.G. Wood on December 6, 2008

Love and Squalor in Gus Van Sant’s Transient Portland by M.G. Wood

Walt Curtis is a beat poet from Portland, Oregon with a loyal and dedicated group of followers, ranging from hippies to college…  read review

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DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.