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Broken Flowers Details

2005 Certificate 15
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 27,133 members

Winner of the 2005 Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival, the film tells the story of Don Johnston (Bill Murray), a man overflowing with wealth but void of emotion. On the day that his most recent girlfriend (Julie Delpy) has given up on him for good, he learns, through an anonymous letter, that he might be the father of a 19-.. Read more

Starring Bill Murray, Jeffrey Wright, Sharon Stone, Tilda Swinton
Director Jim Jarmusch
Genres Comedy

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Broken Flowers

Winner of the 2005 Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival, the film tells the story of Don Johnston (Bill Murray), a man overflowing with wealth but void of emotion. On the day that his most recent girlfriend (Julie Delpy) has given up on him for good, he learns, through an anonymous letter, that he might be the father of a 19-year-old boy. Spurned into action by his wannabe private eye neighbour, Winston (Jeffrey Wright), Don sets off on a personal journey to visit the former partners who may or may not have mothered his child. They include the flighty Laura (Sharon Stone), whose daughter Lolita (Alexis Dziena) certainly lives up to her name; the uptight Dora (Frances Conroy), who has settled into a sterile life with her chipper husband Ron (Christopher McDonald); the strangely distant Carmen (Jessica Lange), who makes a living as an Animal Communicator and, finally, Penny (Tilda Swinton), a hard-edged biker who is the least happiest to see Don. Each confrontation leaves Don feeling more lost than the last, spinning him into an even greater state of apathetic confusion.

Starring Bill Murray, Jeffrey Wright, Sharon Stone, Tilda Swinton, Julie Delpy, Jessica Lange, Frances Conroy, Brea Frazier, Jerry Fall
Director Jim Jarmusch
Studio MOMENTUM PICTURES
Run time DVD: 1 hr 41 mins
Certificate Certificate 15
Genres Comedy
Language DVD: English
Hearing-impaired English
Released DVD: 20 Mar 2006
Production year: 2005
Format DVD
  • Critics' reviews (5) of Broken Flowers

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  • With BROKEN FLOWERS, Jim Jarmusch's sly, touching new film, Bill Murray reaffirms his status as the quietest comic actor in movies today

    • New York Times
  • BROKEN FLOWERS exudes some of the twinkle-eyed, deadpan humor from LOST IN TRANSLATION... FLOWERS is smartly observational

    • USA Today
  • Most helpful member's review of Broken Flowers

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  • 47 out of 51 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 2 stars

    No Lost in Translation

    Bill Murray turns in another understated performance this time for Jim Jarmusch in Broken Flowers. Murray stars as the unfortunately named Don Johnston, a sort of latter day Don Juan who’s comfortable life is turned slightly askew when he receives a letter informing him he has an eighteen year old son from a former conquest. As the letter is unsigned Don inflicts on himself an odyssey through the past to find the truth.

    Broken Flowers has been described as Jarmusch’s most commercial film yet. Though this is true, viewers may find the director’s choice of long static shots and preference to leave major plot points unanswered slightly infuriating. Murry is superb as Don but one wonders how long this style of acting or non-acting can be stretched before audiences become indifferent.

    As with previous Jarmusch features, it is the secondary characters that are most successful. Sharon Stone’s trailer trash mother accompanied by jailbait daughter Lolita is inspired and Jeffrey Wright’s detective and Ethiopian jazz obsessed neighbour is a standout.

    While intermittently amusing, Broken Flowers does not compare favourably with previous Murry films such as Rushmore and Lost in Translation but will not tarnish his recent movie-making renaissance.

      • moviefiend from East Sussex
  • Most recent members' review of Broken Flowers

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  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    Waste of Time

    Sadly this potentially amusing story never took off in my opinion thanks to Bill Murray who played the part too emotionally void to the point of boringly monotonous and, I'm afraid, could never be convincing as a Don Juan in any lifetime, funny, yes, but no heart throb. Waste of good female cast and my time!

      • A customer from Oxon, England
  • News and features

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    Deja Vu - BLU-RAY Version

    Stars shine at 2 Days in Paris premiere

    • 08 Aug 2007

    Stars turned out this week for the premiere of a forthcoming comedy entitled 2 Days in Paris, which tells the story of a couple desperate to rekindle their romance in the European city. Both of the main characters, played by Julie Delpy and Adam Goldberg, took to the red carpet in Los Angeles and celebrated the movie's debut, while cinema-lovers in the UK can see it from August 31st when it is released here. French actress Julie Delpy also directed 2 Days in Paris, following her work in films... Read more

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Rating breakdown

27,133 Member ratings
  • 100
972
  • 90
1,484
  • 80
3,530
  • 70
4,435
  • 60
5,540
  • 50
3,614
  • 40
2,955
  • 30
2,070
  • 20
1,702
  • 10
831

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