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Broken Flowers

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United States, France · 2005
Rated R · 1h 46m
Director Jim Jarmusch
Starring Bill Murray, Julie Delpy, Sharon Stone, Tilda Swinton
Genre Comedy, Drama, Mystery, Romance

As the devoutly single Don Johnston is dumped by his latest girlfriend, he receives an anonymous pink letter informing him that he has a son who may be looking for him.

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What are critics saying?

60

Film Threat by

Possibly the most European of major American directors, Jim Jarmusch wears his influences on his sleeve and makes no bones about it.

80

Dallas Observer by Bill Gallo

If you're shopping for neatly tied bundles of plot and the rigid arcs of "character development" common to mainstream movies, look elsewhere. Whether he's playing on the road or at home, Jarmusch always throws a lot of off-speed stuff, and that's his glory.

90

Newsweek by David Ansen

Funny, bittersweet, its understatement yielding surprising depth charges, Broken Flowers is a triumph of close observation and telling details.

70

The New Yorker by David Denby

Murray’s linking up with Jim Jarmusch is a case of Mr. Cool meeting Mr. Cool, and the result is intriguing and elegant, but not quite satisfying.

90

Village Voice by Jessica Winter

With elegant restraint the film subtly intimates the wintry dead end-twilight years bereft of love, partner, or vocation-that may be in store for its aged lover man. (Payne's "About Schmidt" did too, when not gorging snidely on idiot Americana.)

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Kirk Honeycutt

It skips merrily along the surface with its over-the-top vignettes but never seems to arrive at a destination. Nevertheless, the journey is more than half the fun as every actor attacks his role with relish.

90

The A.V. Club by Nathan Rabin

Murray and Jarmusch, two modern masters of minimalism, triumphantly join forces in Broken Flowers, a bittersweet tour de force about a wealthy, deeply depressed lothario.

88

Rolling Stone by Peter Travers

Broken Flowers may be too low-key for laugh junkies, but Jarmusch fills his sharply observed comedy with wonderful mischief. The mix of humor and heartbreak brings out the best in Murray.

80

Variety by Todd McCarthy

Working in his typically idiosyncratic and episodic vein, Jim Jarmusch has nonetheless pitched the film slightly more toward mainstream tastes than usual for him, using excellent thesps in the service of accessible material.

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