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The Limits of Control (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:91
Fresh:36
Rotten:55
Average Rating:4.9/10
Consensus: A minimalist exercise in not much of anything, The Limits of Control is a tedious viewing experience with little reward.
Australian Theatrical Release:
Jul 23, 2009 Wide
US Box Office: $362,032
Synopsis: In spite of the title, THE LIMITS OF CONTROL constantly reveals the controlling hand of its creator, the indie icon Jim Jarmusch. The film follows Jarmusch regular Isaach de Bankole as he ambles... In spite of the title, THE LIMITS OF CONTROL constantly reveals the controlling hand of its creator, the indie icon Jim Jarmusch. The film follows Jarmusch regular Isaach de Bankole as he ambles through various parts of Spain on an ambiguous criminal mission. Credited as the "Lone Man," de Bankole encounters a series of oddly disguised accomplices and absorbs their one-sided philosophical musings, all the while piecing together the nature of his assignment. This narrative sounds more compelling in summary than it is on screen, but if you are seeing a Jarmusch picture in hopes of a scintillating story, then you are as confused as the characters from his more memorable films. The sole disappointment of this film is that, despite the overwhelming strangeness of the action (or lack thereof), none of the characters display any confusion or uncertainty, as they assuredly assess the events and still find time to practice tai chi and pontificate about music, film, science, and painting. The film is rigorously structured: each encounter invokes a definitive theme that clicks firmly into place by the conclusion. The individual scenes are entirely enjoyable, as a white-blond Tilda Swinton discusses Welles and Hitchcock, and John Hurt rasps about the depiction of Spanish bohemians in art and literature. Despite Jarmusch’s domineering presence, it is the brilliant work of his collaborators, particularly cinematographer Christopher Doyle and editor Jay Rabinowitz, that shimmers in the memory of the viewer after the final shot. Doyle makes every line, curve, and diagonal in his frames vibrate with hints of radiant significance, and his ethereal images of the Almerian landscape often draw our attention from the artificial metaphysical dialogue. Jarmusch fans will be delighted by this perplexing metaphor of a film, which aims to symbolize and summarize the whole of existence through its myriad parts. [More]
Starring: Isaach de Bankolé, Bill Murray, Gael Garcia Bernal, Tilda Swinton
Starring: Isaach de Bankolé, Bill Murray, Gael Garcia Bernal, Tilda Swinton, Youki Kudoh, John Hurt, Alex Descas, Jean-François Stévenin, Luis Tosar, Paz de la Huerta
Director: Jim Jarmusch
Director: Jim Jarmusch
Screenwriter: Hiam Abbass, Jim Jarmusch
Producer: Stacey E. Smith, Gretchen McGowan
Studio: Focus Features
Reviews for The Limits of Control
Distracted by the minutiae of the rituals he has constructed, Jarmusch seems unconcerned about making a point, or even constructing a coherent story.
The Limits of Control is two hours of beautifully framed and shot WTF -- a dream I'm pretty sure I've never had.
Paint drying. Photosynthesis. Rush-hour traffic. All these activities would be more entertaining to watch -- and probably speedier -- than Jim Jarmusch's The Limits of Control.
What a drag it is to descend from coolly blank to boringly meaningful.
[The shots in The Limits of Control are] beautiful to look at, but it all goes nowhere in a movie that's all simulacra -- all form and theory with no substance, like a shiny disco ball that reflects everything but is still empty inside.
The film may be ahead of its time -- or it may just be an elaborate put-on.
I once saw an exhibit at an art museum that was a separate room where the noise and light would increase until you couldn't take it anymore. Similar feeling here.
The fun here is in the experience of simply watching and listening, each of equal importance.
It's exactly the film Jarmusch wanted to make, but it's also smug, excruciating, borderline pointless. You could call it a deliberate effort to invert the conventions of the thriller; you could also call it, more rightly, a self-deluded disaster.
It is an elusive, beautifully shot movie, and the more I pondered it, the more I was fascinated by the questions it left in its puzzling, mysterious wake.
This interminable trifle from indie icon Jim Jarmusch aims to be the last word in ironic cool, but it comes across as the work of a fatigued dilettante.
For the impatient viewer, Jarmusch's pulpy, poetic exercise will probably feel hopelessly, unintentionally parodic, prompting disdain and derision. Consider yourself warned -- not everyone's going to go for this business. But I did.
If you force-fed horse tranquilizers to The Bourne Identity, you'd end up with something like Limits of Control.
Where I see thrilling structural and formal exploration, another viewer could see so much pretentious twaddle, and that's a perfectly reasonable response.
Jim Jarmusch is a national treasure, and The Limits of Control is his first stinker.
The eerie displacement of being at large in alien territory is the guiding emotion in Jarmusch's movies, and in none more so than this one.
Latest News for The Limits of Control
April 30, 2009:
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March 15, 2009:
Trailer & Poster review ![]()
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February 26, 2008:
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For those of you who cant get enough of Jim Jarmusch's deadpan indie aesthetic, you're in luck. Variety reports the lo-fi auteurs latest, tentatively titled The Limits of... More...
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