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Broken Flowers

  • 2005
  • R
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
109K
YOUR RATING
Bill Murray in Broken Flowers (2005)
Trailer 1
Play trailer2:06
3 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyRoad TripComedyDramaMysteryRomance

As the extremely withdrawn Don Johnston is dumped by his latest woman, he receives an anonymous letter from a former lover informing him that he has a son who may be looking for him. A freel... Read allAs the extremely withdrawn Don Johnston is dumped by his latest woman, he receives an anonymous letter from a former lover informing him that he has a son who may be looking for him. A freelance sleuth neighbor moves Don to embark on a cross-country search for his old flames in s... Read allAs the extremely withdrawn Don Johnston is dumped by his latest woman, he receives an anonymous letter from a former lover informing him that he has a son who may be looking for him. A freelance sleuth neighbor moves Don to embark on a cross-country search for his old flames in search of answers.

  • Director
    • Jim Jarmusch
  • Writers
    • Jim Jarmusch
    • Bill Raden
    • Sara Driver
  • Stars
    • Bill Murray
    • Jessica Lange
    • Sharon Stone
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    109K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Writers
      • Jim Jarmusch
      • Bill Raden
      • Sara Driver
    • Stars
      • Bill Murray
      • Jessica Lange
      • Sharon Stone
    • 552User reviews
    • 221Critic reviews
    • 79Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 14 nominations total

    Videos3

    Broken Flowers
    Trailer 2:06
    Broken Flowers
    Broken Flowers
    Clip 0:57
    Broken Flowers
    Broken Flowers
    Clip 0:57
    Broken Flowers
    Broken Flowers
    Clip 0:44
    Broken Flowers

    Photos163

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    Top cast31

    Edit
    Bill Murray
    Bill Murray
    • Don Johnston
    Jessica Lange
    Jessica Lange
    • Carmen
    Sharon Stone
    Sharon Stone
    • Laura
    Julie Delpy
    Julie Delpy
    • Sherry
    Heather Alicia Simms
    Heather Alicia Simms
    • Mona
    Brea Frazier
    • Rita
    Jarry Fall
    • Winston and Mona's Kid
    • (as Jarry)
    Korka Fall
    • Winston and Mona's Kid
    Saul Holland
    • Winston and Mona's Kid
    • (as Saul)
    Zakira Holland
    • Winston and Mona's Kid
    Niles Lee Wilson
    • Winston and Mona's Kid
    Jeffrey Wright
    Jeffrey Wright
    • Winston
    Meredith Patterson
    Meredith Patterson
    • Flight Attendant
    Jennifer Rapp
    • Girl on Bus
    Nicole Abisinio
    Nicole Abisinio
    • Girl on Bus
    Ryan Donowho
    Ryan Donowho
    • Young Man on Bus
    Alexis Dziena
    Alexis Dziena
    • Lolita
    Frances Conroy
    Frances Conroy
    • Dora
    • Director
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Writers
      • Jim Jarmusch
      • Bill Raden
      • Sara Driver
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews552

    7.1108.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8drjimmycooper

    Wonderfully unique and charming (but perhaps too spare)

    I just saw this at a press screening. It's very smart, well-made and entertaining, directed with sure-handed control, full of quirky, funny moments and superb acting. The film pretty much avoids clichés, although it does rely a bit on the familiar "Aren't Middle-Americans quirky?" idea for its humor. But Jarmusch never goes too far with this, his restraint keeping the film propelled from beginning to end.

    The only weakness for me is rooted in the film's strength: I feel like there's not quite enough here.

    Murray's character is beleaguered and despondent, Murray plays him with perfect subtlety. This is fun and fascinating to watch; I found myself hanging onto every little expression on Murray's face. But, the combination of his passive, muted performance and the spare storytelling left me wanting more. It just doesn't have as much impact as I feel it could have. So, yes, it's wonderful minimalism, but perhaps a bit too slight of a movie to have any lasting resonance.

    Bill Murray has added another very good performance to his career, and Jim Jarmusch has made another compact little gem (unlike some of his more recent films). Unique and entertaining. Definitely worth seeing.
    JohnDeSando

    A low-key picaresque

    Barely dramatic, thematic but enigmatic, that's Jim Jarmusch's Broken Flowers. His Stranger than Paradise was exactly that, a Cleveland road trip to existential uncertainty. In Broken Flowers, Bill Murray as Don Johnston is also on a trip, but more certain of his goal than anyone in Stranger, for he seeks out his alleged son by visiting former lovers, one of whom anonymously wrote that she had borne him a child 19 years ago.

    The formidable women, including a randy Sharon Stone happily lampooning her film persona and Tilda Swinton, tougher and more dangerous than all the others in her biker mom role, never really sway him from seeking his son or finding himself. Beyond discovering that you can't change the past of "an over-the-hill Don Juan," much less understand him, reflected in the depressing but authentic lack of communication with all but one of his wives, Murray may have discovered on his low-key picaresque a truer self than he had ever known before. He may be beaten up physically, he may be unable to close the case of his putative son, and he may have divorced himself from his millionaire persona as a computer whiz, but he remains a deeply calm, lonely wanderer in his effort to solve his case.

    An amateur detective, neighbor Winston has the spirit and energy Don does not have, yet Don is deeper and more reflective. In fact he outstrips all of his former loves in kindness and caring in calm response to often explosive situations, for instance when Stone's daughter, Lolita, comes on to him only to find he is not available.

    I complain American films are not sophisticated like Euro flicks, but Jarmusch has come close with this slow, laconic, and demanding indie. Hats off to Bill Murray for mixing minimalist with passionate this time around—his purpose and his change of character make his aging Hollywood star Bob from Lost in Translation just a dress rehearsal for this Oscar-worthy performance and film.

    Perhaps Don's discovery is twofold: his potential to love others and himself. As Alexander Smith declared, "Love is but the discovery of ourselves in others, and the delight in the recognition."
    9davetex

    An Exquisite Little Film

    I never saw this movie when it came to the theater. Later on, when it arrived on video, the clerks at the local store rolled their eyes and told stories of renters returning it and complaining that it wasn't funny and was boring. So I didn't rent it, being the mindless lemming that would listen to a video store clerk.

    Then I stumbled across it on one of the TV movie channels and sat down and watched it. Perhaps it was the lack of any expectations on my part, but I found this movie fascinating. Bill Murray has cornered the market on middle aged male guilt and regret. Between this film, Lost in Translation and the Life Aquatic he presents us with a very real sense of what it means to be in your mid fifties and contemplating all that has been missed while pursuing something else.

    The movie moves slowly, at a measured pace, but it has to, because that is how the story unfolds, with the protagonist moving down the road of his past reluctantly, and with trepidation and rightly so, because he has left skeletons behind. Many of them, it would appear.

    Bill Murray was always my favorite SNL guy and he never disappoints, always taking whatever role he is given and doing it well, and doing it as only Bill Murray can. David Spade and Chevy Chase, eat your hearts out. Actually, just retire. But I digress.

    The supporting cast deserves kudos as well. For once, I liked Sharon Stone in a movie. Francis Conroy does her Six Feet Under persona but manages to spin it a little differently, and Jessice Lange is mesmerizing as always. And Jeffrey Wright, as Winston is a perfect foil for the perpetually deadpan Murray.

    But in fairness, I suspect that you have to be middle aged and male to really love this movie and all of its wisdom.
    8evanston_dad

    Good Movie from an On Again/Off Again Director

    I can't think of an actor better suited to play the expressionless chronic bachelor Don at the heart of Jim Jarmusch's newest movie than Bill Murray. His mournful hound-dog face, which hides any trace of what's going on inside the head on which it sits, stares blankly at the T.V., at other people, sometimes at nothing, betrays itself with the slightest movement of the mouth or twitch of the eyes. It's a characterization Murray has so down pat that I'm tempted to think he's not really acting all that much, but he's so perfectly cast that it doesn't much matter whether he's acting or not.

    If you're not familiar with the movies of Jim Jarmusch, "Broken Flowers" is a nice introduction, as it's the most accessible Jarmusch film I've seen. I'm not a huge fan, but I liked this movie quite a lot. Don receives an anonymous letter one day from a past girlfriend, telling him he has a 19-year-old son who may come looking for him. Murray's friend, Winston (played amusingly by the chameleon Jeffrey Wright), convinces him to track down a handful of women who could have possibly been the mother and resolve the mystery. Don agrees to it, seemingly not so much because he has a need to know but because he has nothing better to do. What follows is a series of scenes with each past girlfriend, during which their interactions with Don tell us heaps about their relationship back when they were dating. Some are affectionate, some are distant, one is downright scarily angry, but all are played beautifully by a quartet of actresses: Sharon Stone, Frances Conroy, Jessica Lange and Tilda Swinton.

    This is Jarmusch, so there aren't necessarily any tidy answers, and I don't think I give anything away by saying that the mystery is never solved. Life is messy, and it doesn't always happily resolve itself just because we want it to. I liked how subtle the film was; Don doesn't make any huge ground-breaking discoveries about himself, but nevertheless you sense that he's a slightly different person after his journey than he was before it.

    You'll have to be patient, as Jarmusch tells his story very slowly, and nearly all of Don's interaction with others is ponderously awkward. But the movie slowly begins to fascinate, and you find yourself watching the faces of the women he visits (and examining the visible details of their lives) much in the same way that Don is himself, looking for the slightest hint that she might be the one who sent that fateful letter.

    A very fine film, poignant and sad in a rather obscure way, and one that stays in your mind for a while after seeing it.

    Grade: A-
    7igm

    Jarmusch Goes Mainstream

    Broken Flowers is a departure for Jim Jarmusch, and not an altogether successful one. This film is decidedly more mainstream than anything Jarmusch has directed before. He inserts product from mapquest.com, Sharp, and Ford Taurus; shoots in color; and writes a character being admonished for smoking for starters. This isn't as radical a shift to mainstream as George Lucas going from THX-1138 to Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back. It's more like the Cohen brothers going from Blood Simple to Intolerable Cruelty.

    Broken Flowers is highly structured and deliberately paced (i.e. slow), with an episodic format. Murray's character, Don Johnston, tries to reveal the identity of the woman who alerts him to the existence of his son, awkwardly reuniting with a succession of old flames. Murray's portrayal is fun to watch, and Sharon Stone is still magically delicious. The film has interesting things to say about the suburbs, the path not taken, bachelorhood, and the banality of travel. But it says little and hardly engages. It is the Odyssey with no reason to return home.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Bill Murray, he considered retiring after doing this film because he felt that it was the best acting performance he could ever give.
    • Goofs
      As can be evidenced by the symbols on the airport signs (the letters A, B, and C, individually, are in the center of rounded triangles, designating sections of the airport) Newark Airport (NJ) was used for each of the airport scenes, although Murray's character was supposedly going to many different places in the US.
    • Quotes

      Don Johnston: [to Lolita] That was quite an outfit you weren't wearing earlier.

    • Crazy credits
      Unusually, bit part players with no spoken lines in this movie are listed in the credits. Normally only speaking parts are listed.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: The Island/November/Last Days/The Devil's Rejects/Hustle & Flow (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      There is an End
      Written by Craig James Fox

      Performed by The Greenhornes with Holly Golightly

      Appears on the CD/LP 'Dual Mono'

      Released by Telstar Records, Hoboken, NJ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 26, 2005 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Focus Features (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Flores rotas
    • Filming locations
      • Wayne, New Jersey, USA
    • Production companies
      • Focus Features
      • Five Roses
      • Bac Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $10,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $13,744,960
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $780,408
      • Aug 7, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $47,329,961
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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