Lonesome Jim (2005)

£0.00


Country: US
Technical: col 91m
Director: Steve Buscemi
Cast: Casey Affleck, Liv Tyler, Kevin Corrigan, Mary Kay Place, Seymour Cassel

Synopsis:

After a spell in NYC a depressive young writer returns to his family in Illinois and faces up to a life of emptiness and despair.

Review:

Much less of a downer than the above would imply, thanks to the often mordant humour of its creator, this is every inch an American independent film: low-key, blue collar, family focused and quirky. Typically the hero is a feckless, unsympathetic sort, played by Affleck as a variant on his Robert Ford performance, but the supporting cast are all so engagingly caught and played that he is the still centre of an often appealing whole.

Add To Cart


Country: US
Technical: col 91m
Director: Steve Buscemi
Cast: Casey Affleck, Liv Tyler, Kevin Corrigan, Mary Kay Place, Seymour Cassel

Synopsis:

After a spell in NYC a depressive young writer returns to his family in Illinois and faces up to a life of emptiness and despair.

Review:

Much less of a downer than the above would imply, thanks to the often mordant humour of its creator, this is every inch an American independent film: low-key, blue collar, family focused and quirky. Typically the hero is a feckless, unsympathetic sort, played by Affleck as a variant on his Robert Ford performance, but the supporting cast are all so engagingly caught and played that he is the still centre of an often appealing whole.


Country: US
Technical: col 91m
Director: Steve Buscemi
Cast: Casey Affleck, Liv Tyler, Kevin Corrigan, Mary Kay Place, Seymour Cassel

Synopsis:

After a spell in NYC a depressive young writer returns to his family in Illinois and faces up to a life of emptiness and despair.

Review:

Much less of a downer than the above would imply, thanks to the often mordant humour of its creator, this is every inch an American independent film: low-key, blue collar, family focused and quirky. Typically the hero is a feckless, unsympathetic sort, played by Affleck as a variant on his Robert Ford performance, but the supporting cast are all so engagingly caught and played that he is the still centre of an often appealing whole.