Stranger Than Paradise with John Lurie: DVD Cover
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Stranger Than Paradise Director: Jim Jarmusch Cast: John Lurie, Eszter Balint, Richard Edson, Cecillia Stark

DVD - 2 Disc Set - Wide Screen / B&W Learn more

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  • DVD Release Date: 09/04/2007
  • Original Release: 1984
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 7,656

Viewer Rating: (2 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Performances" See All

 
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  • Editorial Reviews
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Features

Disc One: ; New, restored high-definition digital transfer, supervised and approved by director Jim Jarmusch; ; Disc Two:; Permanent Vacation (1980, 75 minutes), Jarmusch's first full-length feature, presented in a new, restored high-definiton digital transfer, supervised by the director; Kino '84: Jim Jarmusch, a 1984 German television program featuring interviews with cast and crew from Stranger Than Paradise and Permanent Vacation; Some Days in January 1984, a behind-the-scenes Super 8 film by Tom Jarmusch; Location scouting photos; U.S. and Japanese trailers; Plus: a booklet featuring Jarmusch's 1984 "Some Notes on Stranger Than Paradise," Geoff Andrew and J. Hoberman on Stranger Than Paradise, and Luc Sante on Permanent Vacation

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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Stranger Than Paradise
1. The New World [5:28]
2. Ten Days [5:46]
3. "I've Been Winning" [10:43]
4. An Ugly Dress [8:15]
5. One Year Later [3:41]
6. "Which Way Is Cleveland?" [3:19]
7. Aunt Lotte's House [6:55]
8. Hot Dog Stand [2:29]
9. Date Night [4:01]
10. "Everything Looks Just the Same" [2:23]
11. The Big Lake [4:22]
12. Paradise [4:56]
13. Real Tourists [3:16]
14. "I've Got a Good Feeling" [3:48]
15. The Name of the Game [8:04]
16. "You the Freak, Right?" [5:41]
17. Back to Budapest [6:04]
Disc #2 -- Stranger Than Paradise: Permanent Vacation and Supplements
1. From Here to Here [7:13]
2. Just Like Charlie Parker [6:05]
3. The Drift [9:21]
4. Life During Wartime [7:03]
5. Visit With Mom [4:31]
6. Walking [6:33]
7. At the Movies [6:45]
8. Vibrating, Bugged-Out Sound [7:53]
9. Hot Ride [4:48]
10. Skipping Town [7:35]
11. A Certain Kind of Tourist [6:59]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Deadpan humor and a sense of hip aimlessness pervade Stranger Than Paradise, the breakthrough feature of indie auteur Jim Jarmusch. The film's skeletal story follows three proto-slackers -- Willie (John Lurie), his best friend (Richard Edson), and Willie's Hungarian cousin (Eszter Balint) -- on a road trip from New York to Cleveland to Miami. Beautifully filmed in black and white, Stranger Than Paradise uses wide shots, a static camera, and minimal editing to give scenes an almost improvised quality, with plenty of awkward silences alternating with some distinctly non-dramatic dialogue. All three members of the tiny cast give low-key performances that are touching without being overly emotive. The story itself is marvelously episodic, a series of conversation fragments and slice of life moments punctuated with fades and cuts to black. A spare string quartet score by Lounge Lizard Lurie accents the introspective tone of this road movie to nowhere. Jarmusch's signature style -- a mixture of understated humor, formal elegance, and metaphorical richness -- works to perfection here, making Stranger than Paradise an offbeat masterpiece. Gregory Baird, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

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  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 1

A True Classic Indy Pictureby TVProfessor

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September 13, 2009: Jim Jarmusch of the ultra hip jazz group "The Lounge Lizards" begins an incredible body of work with this Black and White story of two losers and a foreign cousin one has to entertain. The story is good but what makes this film great are the deadpan performances, the subtleties, stunning shots and the fact that most of this movie is shot with long shots (thus eliminating the cutaways and close ups that cost money). Released to independent film houses in 1984, this movie revived the American Indy in many ways.

I Also Recommend: Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai, Broken Flowers, Down by Law, Night on Earth, Mystery Train.