
Anna, a French actress, is approached by financial broker Mark in the Vermeer room of a New York gallery. However, romance does not ensue.... (Full plot summary below)
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Anna, a French actress, is approached by financial broker Mark in the Vermeer room of a New York gallery. However, romance does not ensue.
Leave your thoughts about All the Vermeers in New York.
| EmanuelLevy.ComEmanuel LevyJon Jost's most accessible work imports the lyrical camera of his film essays and the violence inherent in his Western to a poignant, wistful meditation about the discrepancy between art and spiritual decay. |
| Spirituality and PracticeFrederic and Mary Ann BrussatA fetching and enigmatic film about love, money and art. |
| User ReviewMatt TThe Wall St scenes in this are hilarious for real. |
| User ReviewLisa KThe one thing that seems very constant in all of Jon Jost's films is that they don't concern themselves with plot, at least in the narrative sense, but are rather all about feeling and setting, as well as how these things interact with one and other. This film is different than his others I have seen in that it takes place in the urban setting of New York city. Jost focuses on the hustle and bustle of the city and how this chaotic state can create a lack of human connection between individuals which breeds loneliness. A scene which captures this perfectly takes place on the Empire State Building where the stockbroker talks about how insignificant he feels, while Jost's camera focuses on a shot of the cities skyline from above, music becomes louder and louder becoming overwhelming which seems to convey this fast-paced lifestyle which loneliness can inhabit. While this film is full some beautiful and enigmatic scenes, this was the one film of his where I thought there were a few moments where his wandering camera felt unnecessary and distracting. One particular scene involves the stock broker and french actress talking on a couch where the camera oscillates slowly, panning back and forth between the two of them. That being said, I was emotionally attached to both these characters for different reasons and Jost has created another fascinating feature; though, this film had to have the least interesting/powerful ending of the films I have seen. |
| User ReviewMichael RI guess I'm too dense to appreciate this overall well received indie flick by maverick director Jon Jost. Poorly acted, dull diologue, and characters I couldnt care less about. |
| User ReviewLee Mfuck da rats get rid ov bush mumma tuker trile |