Living in Oblivion (Ws)

Starring:Steve Buscemi, Catherine Keener, Dermot Mulroney, Danielle von Zerneck, James LeGros, Rica Martens, Peter Dinklage, Kevin Corrigan, Hilary Gilford, Robert Wightman, Tom Jarmusch, Michael Griffiths (II), Matthew Grace, Ryan Bowker, Francesca DiMauro, Norman Fields, Lori Tan Chinn, Vincenzo Amelia, Laurel Thornby
Director: Tom DiCillo
Studio: Sony Pictures
Product Type: DVD
Editorial Review:
Amazon.com
You won't find a smarter, more amusing, or more accurate send-up of low-budget filmmaking than Tom DiCillo's 1995 independent feature, Living in Oblivion, wherein a motley cast of would-be artistes blunders its way through a day on the set. Steve Buscemi plays goateed Nick Reve, a harried, sweating director whose crew of numbskulls and egotists seems hell-bent on ruining his film. The trials and tribulations of independent filmmaking are not foreign material for writer-director DiCillo, who cut his teeth as Jim Jarmusch's cinematographer on 1985's Stranger Than Paradise before going on to direct his own work, such as the offbeat 1992 comedy Johnny Suede. Like that film, Living in Oblivion rides a precariously thin line between the real and the surreal, featuring a midget actor and an exploding smoke-effects machine, as well as a ridiculously narcissistic Brad Pittesque character played by James Le Gros. While films like Get Shorty, François Truffaut's Day for Night, and Jean-Luc Godard's Contempt suggest that moviemaking is hip and glamorous, Living in Oblivion will have none of that. The film within the film feels like a director's primer on what not to do, and this modest-budget gem both lovingly and caustically strips the "cool" veneer from the filmmaking process. They should show this one to kids thinking of entering film school. It might make them think better of it. --Nick Poppy
Average customer rating:
- His moon is in Uranus
- The Experience of making a low-budget movie can't be fun?
- Will make you fall in love with acting...
- Living in a brain-splattered bloody living room from the shotgun blast to my mouth..
- Failure begets success
|
Living in Oblivion
Starring: Steve Buscemi , Catherine Keener , Dermot Mulroney , Danielle von Zerneck , and James LeGros
Director: Tom DiCillo
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
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Buscemi, Steve
| ( B )
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Corrigan, Kevin
| ( C )
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Gros, James Le
| ( G )
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Keener, Catherine
| ( K )
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Mulroney, Dermot
| ( M )
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Wightman, Robert
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Zerneck, Danielle Von
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Similar Items:
- In the Soup
- Trees Lounge
- Box of Moonlight
- The Player (Special Edition) (New Line Platinum Series)
- The Big Picture
ASIN: B00007L4OB
Release Date: 2003-02-11 |
Amazon.com
You won't find a smarter, more amusing, or more accurate send-up of low-budget filmmaking than Tom DiCillo's 1995 independent feature, Living in Oblivion, wherein a motley cast of would-be artistes blunders its way through a day on the set. Steve Buscemi plays goateed Nick Reve, a harried, sweating director whose crew of numbskulls and egotists seems hell-bent on ruining his film. The trials and tribulations of independent filmmaking are not foreign material for writer-director DiCillo, who cut his teeth as Jim Jarmusch's cinematographer on 1985's Stranger Than Paradise before going on to direct his own work, such as the offbeat 1992 comedy Johnny Suede. Like that film, Living in Oblivion rides a precariously thin line between the real and the surreal, featuring a midget actor and an exploding smoke-effects machine, as well as a ridiculously narcissistic Brad Pittesque character played by James Le Gros. While films like Get Shorty, François Truffaut's Day for Night, and Jean-Luc Godard's Contempt suggest that moviemaking is hip and glamorous, Living in Oblivion will have none of that. The film within the film feels like a director's primer on what not to do, and this modest-budget gem both lovingly and caustically strips the "cool" veneer from the filmmaking process. They should show this one to kids thinking of entering film school. It might make them think better of it. --Nick Poppy
Customer Reviews:
His moon is in Uranus.......2006-07-27
I normally do not enjoy movies about the making of movies, so I was very pleasantly surprised to be thoroughly entertained by 'Living in Oblivion'. The reason I took the chance at all was due to the presence of Catherine Keener, one of our most overlooked and under-appreciated Hollywood actresses. She once again did not disappoint, but the entire cast was extremely good. You get a real education on the frustrations and challenges involved with making a low budget film. Buscemi is also right on target as the stessed out director. The Amazon reviews are for the most part positive about this film and for good reason. I'm glad to join my fellow Amazonians in heaping praise on this low budget gem.
The Experience of making a low-budget movie can't be fun?.......2006-06-06
Living in Oblivion was highly recommended to me by my fellow film crew members, because they all say that we are practically experiencing this film on our shoot. The only difference is this film actually have stars and a budget, dispite the story is about low-budget filmmaking. I found this film hugely entertaining and realistically depicted and I can totally relate to what goes on throughout Oblivion. Yes, a lot of chaos and mishaps take place and in this movie.
Catherine Keener is great as a somewhat well-known actress who has worked on a Richard Gere movie, and now she's the star of a super low budget movie. She has very low confidence in herself as a actress, but the director(Buscemi) still believes in her. He miscast a well-known arrogant male lead who ended up having a one-nite-stand with Keener. The two lead have no chemistry working together on set, and they just can't stand each other anymore. The crew is also kind of nut case. From the cameraman(Dermot Mulroney) who has a disfunctional relationship with the 1st A.D., to the Boom operator who constantly crosses into frame during a take, to the actors not remembering the lines and so on.... It's just so funny. You just wonder how people can work on shows like this.
I really enjoyed watching Steve Buscemi, Keener,Mulrony, and the Sharon Stone look-alike actress who played the 1st A.D.
Will make you fall in love with acting..........2006-03-03
An education in filmmaking disguised as a love/hate note to independent cinema production. Will make you either fall in love with actors or wish they could all be replaced by computers! NOTE: Make sure you get the right version! The inexpensive version I got off Amazon Marketplace (rated Canadian Home Video 14A) didn't include director Tom DiCillo's great commentary.
Living in a brain-splattered bloody living room from the shotgun blast to my mouth.........2005-10-03
I firmly state that this touches the highest level of cinematic genius; right next to Too Wong Foo, Thanks for everything Julie Newmar....
Failure begets success.......2005-09-08
"Living in Oblivion" is one of those unassuming, low-circulation titles that make you wish your fellow citizens had more taste in cinema because then perhaps Hollywood would try making smarter films more often. Although, at the same time, you're almost glad they don't so you can hoard all these great movie experiences for yourself. The movie, in a nutshell, is about the agony and frustration of trying to make a low-budget film about a woman who was abused as a child and who is about to get married to someone she works with. Steve Buscemi, as the director, tries his damnedest to get the scenes to work, but instead is stymied at every turn: technical difficulties; incompetence by his crew; personal problems with his actors and the his crew; an obnoxious dwarf; and of course, past-its-expiration-date milk. It's these annoyances and hindrances that bring out the best scenes in the movie -- the "real" movie and the "in-production" movie. Buscemi gets to do a couple of his signature explosive outrages, like the Tasmanian Devil, only more coherent and quite a bit angrier (and less hair). Catherine Keener, one of the most underrated actresses in the business today, is smartly sensitive yet brutally honest with her feelings; not quite as sarcastically vicious as she was in "Being John Malkovich" or "Death to Smoochy". Those two actors were ostensibly the reason I originally saw the movie, but I bought the DVD due to the movie's originality, cleverness and humor as a whole. The special features include a few deleted scenes (including one great musical bit with the dwarf actor, Peter Dinklage), and a college film class interview with Dicillo and Buscemi. A screen gem that will have you alternately roaring with laughter and appreciating the way a movie can hit your emotions and your mind in such a sweet, unsuspecting way.
Average customer rating:
|
Living in Oblivion
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
DVDs Under $9.99
| Today's Deals in DVD
| Special Features
| DVD
| Video
Similar Items:
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ASIN: B000FAKPY6 |
Product Description
Tagline: Nick is about to discover the first rule of filmmaking: if at first you don't succeed... PANIC!
Plot Outline Film about filmmaking. It takes place during one day on set of non-budget movie. Ultimate tribute to all independent filmmakers.
Plot Synopsis: Recapitulating the movie-within-a-movie concept, here Nick Reve is directing an independent movie with a shoestring budget and a film crew with at least as many neuroses as goatees. When the action spills outside of the scenes and everything goes all wrong, (real- life) writer/director Tom DiCillo throws tragicomic jabs at the strange, and painfully human, process of making movies.
Description
Congressman Bill McCollum and journalist Dick Reavis offer their thoughts on the upcoming Waco hearings, the government reaction to the Branch Davidian situation, and David Koresh. Then, Mary Fisher talks about her unlikely AIDS activism and her new collection of speeches, titled I'll Not Go Quietly. Next, director Tom DiCillo discusses his new film Living in Oblivion, which tells the story of what's involved in the making of a low-budget feature film. Finally, Claudia Shear on her new film Body Language and her one-woman show, Blown Sideways Through Life.
Average customer rating:
- His moon is in Uranus
- The Experience of making a low-budget movie can't be fun?
- Will make you fall in love with acting...
- Living in a brain-splattered bloody living room from the shotgun blast to my mouth..
- Failure begets success
|
Living in Oblivion [Region 2]
Starring: Steve Buscemi , Catherine Keener , Dermot Mulroney , Danielle von Zerneck , and James LeGros
Director: Tom DiCillo
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
General
| Comedy
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Buscemi, Steve
| ( B )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Corrigan, Kevin
| ( C )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Gros, James Le
| ( G )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Keener, Catherine
| ( K )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Mulroney, Dermot
| ( M )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Wightman, Robert
| ( W )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Zerneck, Danielle Von
| ( Z )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
( L )
| Titles
| Features
| DVD
| Video
Similar Items:
- In the Soup
- Trees Lounge
- Box of Moonlight
- The Player (Special Edition) (New Line Platinum Series)
- The Big Picture
ASIN: B000050FJD |
Amazon.com
You won't find a smarter, more amusing, or more accurate send-up of low-budget filmmaking than Tom DiCillo's 1995 independent feature, Living in Oblivion, wherein a motley cast of would-be artistes blunders its way through a day on the set. Steve Buscemi plays goateed Nick Reve, a harried, sweating director whose crew of numbskulls and egotists seems hell-bent on ruining his film. The trials and tribulations of independent filmmaking are not foreign material for writer-director DiCillo, who cut his teeth as Jim Jarmusch's cinematographer on 1985's Stranger Than Paradise before going on to direct his own work, such as the offbeat 1992 comedy Johnny Suede. Like that film, Living in Oblivion rides a precariously thin line between the real and the surreal, featuring a midget actor and an exploding smoke-effects machine, as well as a ridiculously narcissistic Brad Pittesque character played by James Le Gros. While films like Get Shorty, François Truffaut's Day for Night, and Jean-Luc Godard's Contempt suggest that moviemaking is hip and glamorous, Living in Oblivion will have none of that. The film within the film feels like a director's primer on what not to do, and this modest-budget gem both lovingly and caustically strips the "cool" veneer from the filmmaking process. They should show this one to kids thinking of entering film school. It might make them think better of it. --Nick Poppy
Customer Reviews:
His moon is in Uranus.......2006-07-27
I normally do not enjoy movies about the making of movies, so I was very pleasantly surprised to be thoroughly entertained by 'Living in Oblivion'. The reason I took the chance at all was due to the presence of Catherine Keener, one of our most overlooked and under-appreciated Hollywood actresses. She once again did not disappoint, but the entire cast was extremely good. You get a real education on the frustrations and challenges involved with making a low budget film. Buscemi is also right on target as the stessed out director. The Amazon reviews are for the most part positive about this film and for good reason. I'm glad to join my fellow Amazonians in heaping praise on this low budget gem.
The Experience of making a low-budget movie can't be fun?.......2006-06-06
Living in Oblivion was highly recommended to me by my fellow film crew members, because they all say that we are practically experiencing this film on our shoot. The only difference is this film actually have stars and a budget, dispite the story is about low-budget filmmaking. I found this film hugely entertaining and realistically depicted and I can totally relate to what goes on throughout Oblivion. Yes, a lot of chaos and mishaps take place and in this movie.
Catherine Keener is great as a somewhat well-known actress who has worked on a Richard Gere movie, and now she's the star of a super low budget movie. She has very low confidence in herself as a actress, but the director(Buscemi) still believes in her. He miscast a well-known arrogant male lead who ended up having a one-nite-stand with Keener. The two lead have no chemistry working together on set, and they just can't stand each other anymore. The crew is also kind of nut case. From the cameraman(Dermot Mulroney) who has a disfunctional relationship with the 1st A.D., to the Boom operator who constantly crosses into frame during a take, to the actors not remembering the lines and so on.... It's just so funny. You just wonder how people can work on shows like this.
I really enjoyed watching Steve Buscemi, Keener,Mulrony, and the Sharon Stone look-alike actress who played the 1st A.D.
Will make you fall in love with acting..........2006-03-03
An education in filmmaking disguised as a love/hate note to independent cinema production. Will make you either fall in love with actors or wish they could all be replaced by computers! NOTE: Make sure you get the right version! The inexpensive version I got off Amazon Marketplace (rated Canadian Home Video 14A) didn't include director Tom DiCillo's great commentary.
Living in a brain-splattered bloody living room from the shotgun blast to my mouth.........2005-10-03
I firmly state that this touches the highest level of cinematic genius; right next to Too Wong Foo, Thanks for everything Julie Newmar....
Failure begets success.......2005-09-08
"Living in Oblivion" is one of those unassuming, low-circulation titles that make you wish your fellow citizens had more taste in cinema because then perhaps Hollywood would try making smarter films more often. Although, at the same time, you're almost glad they don't so you can hoard all these great movie experiences for yourself. The movie, in a nutshell, is about the agony and frustration of trying to make a low-budget film about a woman who was abused as a child and who is about to get married to someone she works with. Steve Buscemi, as the director, tries his damnedest to get the scenes to work, but instead is stymied at every turn: technical difficulties; incompetence by his crew; personal problems with his actors and the his crew; an obnoxious dwarf; and of course, past-its-expiration-date milk. It's these annoyances and hindrances that bring out the best scenes in the movie -- the "real" movie and the "in-production" movie. Buscemi gets to do a couple of his signature explosive outrages, like the Tasmanian Devil, only more coherent and quite a bit angrier (and less hair). Catherine Keener, one of the most underrated actresses in the business today, is smartly sensitive yet brutally honest with her feelings; not quite as sarcastically vicious as she was in "Being John Malkovich" or "Death to Smoochy". Those two actors were ostensibly the reason I originally saw the movie, but I bought the DVD due to the movie's originality, cleverness and humor as a whole. The special features include a few deleted scenes (including one great musical bit with the dwarf actor, Peter Dinklage), and a college film class interview with Dicillo and Buscemi. A screen gem that will have you alternately roaring with laughter and appreciating the way a movie can hit your emotions and your mind in such a sweet, unsuspecting way.
Product Description
France released, PAL/Region 2 DVD: it WILL NOT play on standard US DVD player. You need multi-region PAL/NTSC DVD player to view it in USA/Canada. LANGUAGES: English (Mono), French (Subtitles), WIDESCREEN, SYNOPSIS: Recapitulating the movie-within-a-movie concept, here Nick Reve is directing an independent movie with a shoestring budget and a film crew with at least as many neuroses as goatees. When the action spills outside of the scenes and everything goes all wrong, (real- life) writer/director Tom DiCillo throws tragicomic jabs at the strange, and painfully human, process of making movies.
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