Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Among the most romantic depictions of Memphis, Tennessee ever put on film, Jim Jarmusch’s nocturnal odyssey takes in three tales across a single night in Elvis’s hometown. Oozing cool, Mystery Train remains Jarmusch’s most nostalgic work—an elegiac ode to the pop cultural relics of bygone Americana.

  2. Is Mystery Train streaming? Find out where to watch online amongst 45+ services including Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video. ... Mystery Train (1989) 21272. +18252-85%-

    • 106 min
  3. Film "Mystery Train" można podsumować, używając właściwie tylko jednego zdania. To typowy obraz jarmuschowski. I wcale nie oznacza to, że film jest tak słaby, że szkoda poświęcać jego opisaniu więcej miejsca ;). Wręcz przeciwnie! Trudno wyobrazić sobie większy komplement z moich ust. Wszak jestem wielkim fanem twórczości ...

  4. 26 gen 1990 · Mystery train. The two most evocative words in the language, suggesting streamliners into the night and strangers whose eyes meet in the club car as the train's rhythm creates an erotic reverie. But trains are no longer quite like that in America, and the opening shots of Jim Jarmusch's new film show two young Japanese tourists in a faded Amtrak coach, listening to their Walkmans as the train ...

  5. Directed by Jim Jarmusch • 1989 • United States Starring Masatoshi Nagase, Youki Kudoh, Nicoletta Braschi Aloof teenage Japanese tourists, a frazzled Italian widow, and a disgruntled British immigrant all converge in the city of dreams—which, in MYSTERY TRAIN, from Jim Jarmusch, is Memphis.

  6. Critique : Amateur de saynètes humoristiques (celles de Coffee and cigarettes ont jalonné sa carrière), Jarmusch touche en 1989 avec Mystery train au film à sketches comique. Son quatrième métrage, juste après le triomphe inespéré de Down by law , lui permet de revenir à Cannes où il décroche le prix de la Meilleure Contribution Artistique.

  7. Although a train plays a key role in the film, the linking elements are a seedy hotel, a radio DJ playing Elvis Presley's version of "Blue Moon" and a single gunshot heard early one morning. I'm not sure how others might react to the first story, which involves two Japanese tourists, Jun (Masatoshi Nagase) and Mitzuko (Yûki Kudô), looking to connect with the Memphis vibe.