Paris, Texas (The Criterion Collection)
S**Y
Criterion rejuvenates another classic
Paris, Texas (1984)Drama, 147 minutesDirected by Wim WendersStarring Harry Dean Stanton, Nastassja Kinski and Dean StockwellThe first thing to mention about Paris, Texas is how quickly the opening scene establishes a mood. We are shown sweeping shots of a desert to the sound of Ry Cooder's haunting guitar. A man who we will later know as Travis (Stanton) comes into view. He looks like he's been wandering for days. He's wearing a red cap and jeans and his beard looks several weeks old. He wanders into an isolated bar and collapses.A local clinic tends to his injuries and contacts his brother, Walt (Stockwell), who flies from Los Angeles to collect him. It's been four years since the two last met and Walt had wondered whether Travis was still alive. Travis doesn't speak during this meeting and Walt has to show extreme patience while he waits for Travis to begin explaining what happened. In a sense, the audience is in the same situation. For almost 30 minutes, the film plays out like a total mystery.Walt wants to fly Travis home because he took in his child as his own when Travis disappeared. Travis insists that they drive, and on using the same rental car Walt drove when he picked him up. We learn that Travis has bought some land in Paris, Texas, but he can't remember why. It's clear that Travis has been through a traumatic experience and has attempted to block out those memories.Travis makes two important decisions during the story:The first could spawn all manner of debate about whether it is right or wrong. His mental health is in question, and yet he makes a decision that could drastically alter someone's life; or perhaps the lives of several people. You'll have to decide for yourself whether his actions were justified.The second decision comes as a result of a meeting with a person who used to be important in his life. In the final 25 minutes of the film, we are shown a very unusual conversation. It's tense, emotional, brave, heartbreaking and elegant all at once. It's this conversation which elevates the film to the level of greatness. The ending is almost impossible to predict early in the film, and that's something I find refreshing. Here's a film with an idea and it's perfectly executed.Harry Dean Stanton has played so many colorful characters over the years, but Paris, Texas gives him his most significant role. He gives Travis depth and the film wouldn't work without him. His appearance and haunted expression fit the character and his performance is quiet, but powerful.Nastassja Kinski's performance as Jane is a revelation. Watch the subtle emotions on her face and hear how expressive her voice can be as she responds to Stanton's monologue. I'm also impressed by Hunter Carson's realistic portrayal of a young boy.It's always interesting to see things from a different viewpoint and Wim Wenders shows us how he views America. The screenplay and Ry Cooder's score work together well. This is the kind of film that seems timeless. It's a human story set in a world so large that its characters are in danger of becoming lost, but they somehow find their way.I had to make a choice of my own in this review. Should I give away the whole story so that I could discuss some of the best scenes, or should I say just enough to set the mood? I hope that I have said enough to make you interested in seeing the film. If you do, maybe you'll understand why I withheld so much information.
M**A
Lengthy and Interesting Film
So much to unwrap with this film. Very unique in style and story. I had seen it long ago, and I find it still holds up. Absolutely deserved a place in my movie collection. Good cast. Good story. Good direction. If you enjoy cerebral films, this is a winner.
L**E
Love on the sacrificial altar
Any viewer must mindfully discern the emerging central conflict....because it's in the title. A road film where space is almost a tacit character, and the people or characters flail about in space searching for their own meaning. Also, driving theme of idealism vs. realism, and projecting one's ideals onto a person who might be quite different. Think: Cervantes' "Don Quixote." where less is more, and the driving theme emerges gradually, just as Travis seems to emerge from the south Texas landscape while a disinterested eagle perches, scans him, then flies away. A viewer might lose interest anywhere in the first 40 minutes waiting for the tedious yet common media-created violence to crunch Travis, his brother and sister-in-law, and his young son, Hunter, an improbable but plausible leader as he begins to know and love and trust his errant father. Okay, it's about love, and the Socratic maxim: "Know thyself." Ho-hum...so much trouble nowadays, but oh so badly needed. But wait! You will forget that Harry Dean Stanton is the actor as his character, Travis, tracks down Jane, finally with his son Hunter, to a Houston girlie salon with oneway glass. Then, hold the remote, be ready to stop, reverse, repeat dialogue because Sam Shepherd's is so natural, so plausible, as Jane finally comes to grips in sober honesty with why she left, why she became a failed mother. Heroism is everywhere, and true heroes of their own lives sometimes exit the back stairs and drive quietly away knowing they did the right thing.
D**R
Best Film of the 80s?
There aren't many films that I'd consider to be idling near perfection, but I would say that about Paris, Texas. In fact, I would call this the best film of the 80s. And yes, I know that's saying a lot considering the movies that were released during that decade. A fantastic score by Ry Cooder, the unparalleled cinematography of Robby Muller, a heart wrenching script by the late-great Sam Shephard, and a beautifully understated performance by the late, legendary Harry Dean Stanton - all pulled together seamlessly by director Wim Wenders- makes this a movie to remember. Even the landscape of the the American southwest and southern California seem to come to life on screen.The story follows Travis, a man who once had a family but then disappeared into the desert, as he reemerges years later and decides to right some of the wrongs he's responsible for. To say any more than that would spoil what are some of the most emotionally resonating moments ever put to film. Especially the dialogues between Harry Dean Stanton and Nastassja Kinski.Please see this film.
A**Z
"I knew these two people ..."
Wim Wenders brings Sam Sheperd's story of lost, damaged souls to mesmerizing life. A homeless and amnesiac Travis Henderson (Harry Dean Stanton) stumbles out of the desert and collapses. A local doctor examines Travis, calls a number he finds in the drifter's wallet. The number belongs to Travis' brother, Walt (Dean Stockwell). We learn from Walt that Travis has been missing for four years, during which time Walt and his wife Anne have been raising Travis' son, Hunter (Hunter Carson). Reunited with Hunter, Travis slowly emerges from his mental fog and attempts to connect with Hunter, who barely remembers him. Hunter better remembers his absent mother Jane (Nasstassja Kinski). The film then turns toward the mystery of what happened to Jane and what it has to do with Travis' strange disappearance, four years' earlier. Wenders' spins this story to Ry Cooder's scratching, haunting acoustic guitar riffs, against shimmering desert scenes. This is an unforgettable film about loneliness, regret, anomie, and the search for forgiveness.
A**R
Masterpiece !
wim wenders masterpiece on a splendid transfer, great piece of movie art.
T**K
A sorrowful tale told with sublime simplicity
The Criterion Collection's release of Wim Wender's "Paris, Texas" is a cause for celebration. Shot by his long-time collaborator Robby Muller, the Blu-Ray format gives the rich colour pallete it's just deserve, and further textualizes the narrative of this deeply nuanced tale penned by Sam Shepard (based on his Motel Chronicles short stories).The film begins with an aerial shot of Texas' Devil's Graveyard, a barren landscape where the main character Travis Henderson (Harry Dean Stanton), is wandering amongst the hardscrabble terrain wearing a suit, a red baseball cap, and carrying a jug of water. Unable to talk, and repressing his memories, he is eventually re-united with his Los Angeles based brother Walt (Dean Stockwell). They drive from Texas back to California, where Walt and his wife Anne (Aurore Clement) have been looking after Travis's son Hunter (Hunter Carlson) during Travis' four year absence. Now eight, Hunter seeks to bond with his father, and as a result Travis and Hunter set out to travel back to Texas to find Travis' wife (and Hunter's mother) Jane (Nastassja Kinski). Upon his discovery of Jane's current workplace in a peep show venue, Travis elequantly confronts her through a one-way mirror to let her know how much he regrets his prior indiscretions, and that he has brought Hunter with him in an effort to restablish their family.The short synposis above tells the story - but the film itself is enhanced even more by the Ry Cooder soundtrack and the photography of Robby Muller. The supplemental material - with which the Criterion Collection never fails to impress - includes a 2000 interview on German TV with Wenders, in which he elaborates on the script writing process with Shepard. They went into production with only half the script written, and when they reached the end of the pages, with Shepard on another shoot in Illinois, Wenders enlisted Kit Carlson (the father of Hunter Carlson, who plays Travis' son), and they together, along with some telexed pages from Shepard, were able to finish the script, and consequently, the filming. Two other interviews with Claire Denis (Assistant Director) and Allison Anders (Production Assistant), are also revealing, and especially nostalgiac as these two formidable women are now immensely respected directors in their own right.I had owned this film on VHS for a couple decades, having The Criterion Collection release it on Blu Ray and give it the red carpet treatment is a special treat. This is a seminal independant film, and has been noted by U2 as an inspiration for their Joshua Tree album, and by both Elliot Smith and Kurt Cobain as their all-time favorite film. Nevertheless, this is a film not just worth watching, but owning and referencing from time to time due to it's timeless construct. 5 stars for so many reasons.
Z**K
One of my favorite films of all time.
Harry dean stanton is the greatest american character actor of all time and this is his greatest work enough said.
A**K
imaging is really good
i particulary liked the desert scene in the very begining, deoth perception.
A**R
A+ transaction !
All went extremely well !
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