MovieChat Forums > The Limits of Control (2009) Discussion > Tell me why I should appreciate this fil...

Tell me why I should appreciate this film.


I do like off-beat, artsy films. I appreciate visual beauty and music in a movie. I can appreciate a slow pace when it's done with a purpose. I have a broad mind and I'm not stupid. But I still thought this was a piece of crap. Yes, the visuals and music were good, but they didn't mean anything. If you're going to make a symbolic film, there has to be purpose to the symbolic content. Randomness is not symbolism. This movie delivered its symbolic message at the end, but the two hours leading up to that didn't give the audience anything to go with because the film went nowhere.

The message in the film was not enlightening to me in any way at all. The filmmaker's point of view is something that only people who very passionately share that point of view can appreciate. To others, it isn't controversial, it isn't interesting, and it doesn't open the mind.

I think it's fine that a filmmaker decides to take an unconventional approach - but in order for it to be a good film, he needs to succeed with the unconventional tools he chooses to use. I just thought this was completely terrible.

I am open to countering opinions, and yes, I do have the capacity to understand abstract ideas so please don't respond if all you want to do is insult my intelligence.

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You're right. Limits of Control is a piece of crap. I got suckered into renting it because the trailer is somewhat intriguing, the stars like Swinton, Murray, and that Mexican kid piqued my interest, and I liked some of Jarmusch's previous films like Dead Man.

Wow, talk about false advertising! Swinton, Murray, and that Mexican kid all have about 5 minutes of screen time each. The plot is vague at best. The long never ending takes of the main character are excruciating. I fast forwarded through them and it still took 5 minutes to get past them to the next boring part! So, no plot, no story, an ugly main character....even tits and ass can't help this pile of dung.

Limits of Control is a waste of film, probably one of the worst films I've ever seen. I'm an art/indie/foreign film fan, I find many of them brilliant. On the other hand, while some films in the genre are not very good I usually can find something good even from the bad films.....like, amazing acting, cool plot idea, quirky dialogue, whatever.

With Limits of Control, you get nothing. Nothing! Good cinematography is useless when it's used on a pathetic excuse for a movie. Avoid it.

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I visited Spain years ago and watching the film brought back memories of wandering and climbing the steep paths, stopping for a siesta, and seeing the citizens going about their day. Every movie released does not have to stimulate the viewer at that very moment. A movie or story should inspire us to see how the events presented, whether it is scenes of war or rape, an armed robbery, or two people falling in love, affect the characters. I often read about how a scene upset a viewer because the writer was s graphic in his telling, yet the viewer rarely mentions how the character must feel. There are so many aspects of a film other than action or storyline that can be appreciated by the viewer. I can appreciate the cinematography, the well lit scenes as well as the acting.

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I couldn’t have reiterated it better myself. As a former expat in Spain, I enjoyed the pace taking its time to indulge my nostalgia for one of my life’s most edifying journies filled with encounters with distinctive and gorgeous landscapes and interactions with eccentric and intriguing characters. As a general viewer, I appreciated it for its depiction of loneliness in a subtle and soothing aesthetic audibly complimented with a minimalistic score and sounds and music from the real time surroundings. So many films within the last decade have to have a palpable and predictable plot doused in mindless action sequences and dramatic story shifts, so I appreciated this for deviating from all that jazz. In sum, I viewed this less as a film and more like gazing at a dynamic art piece.

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Not trying to make this personal, but for one who has such an open mind, you are surprisingly comfortable with the notion that because *you* did not see meaning in the film, nobody else could have either.

The symbolic message is not at the end. What's at the end is a stupid political platitude that should have been left out. The message is throughout the movie, everywhere *but* in the end. Yes, the film went nowhere, but why does that have to be a bad thing?

The movie didn't "talk" to you, you didn't find any meaning in it. Fair game. That does not make the film pointless or crap. It just makes it a film you don't like. I liked the film and at no point had the impression that it was just different in order to be different. I saw how Jarmusch wanted to make audiences aware of all the little details they miss in everyday life, and give back some of the child-like fantasy and curiosity.

It's a matter of personal tastes and moods and situations that makes a movie meaningful or meaningless. Out of the many films I have seen this decade, this was one of the few I liked. Not spelling out some moral or message (well, I ignore the ending now), and not having a cookie-cutter story with a happy end, is of course dangerous because many people won't relate to it. But I much prefer to take this chance than to only have Avatars and Transformers in theatres...

Cheers :)

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I'm interested in other points of view than my own, and I like to think of that as openmindedness.

Details - I don't see how that's meaning so much as sensation. Yes, there were beautiful images (one of my favourite moments was when he's looking over the city and it zooms out and becomes a painting in the museum). Little things like that can provoke bits of sensation, but to me there's no continuity in that sort of thing, and that quality can't hold a movie together on its own.

I really wish it wasn't always "Avatars and Transformers" vs. films like this. There's a vast gray area between. My taste veers more towards movies like this one, but this extreme of abstract minimalism is more than I feel I can appreciate.

Thanks for your thoughts, I hadn't really thought of it that way yet.

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I guess I found meaning in the sensation :) and only later I also read somewhere that this was one of Jarmusch's intentions. One particular German review of the movie that I read stated what I mean quite nicely: that the movie gives as much attention to a sliced pear as it does to a naked woman. And not only the overexaggerated visual attention to little details, but also the sounds. Or rather the lack of it, which makes you much more aware of the many sounds that *are* there in everyday life. To me, it really did what Jarmusch said was one of the goals he wanted to achieve: that you look at the world a little differently after leaving the theatre.

I agree though that this alone wouldn't be sufficient to make a feature film, in that it would lack some substance. I liked how it screwed with peoples preconceptions about films, spoiled by generic Hollywood blockbusters - making them expect an action thriller, but giving them a slow, "Hitchcock on dope" kind of minimalism. Also, I am very fond of the classic spy thriller genre, especially of the cheesy clichés, so I loved how the film played with those ("Wait three days until you see the bread. The guitar will find you.") As such, I don't think that the movie really requires more continuity.

However, I think I can see more clearly now how this lack of continuity can seem very unsatisfying. It's really a very personal thing, and if you look at it like that, the reasons why I love the movie so much are mostly superficial. Its kind of meta-humour, its attention detail, and its refreshing slowness and style. Either you like those particular traits or you don't. That really decides whether you love or hate this movie.

But that's the way this kind of movie is supposed to be, I think. You can't make it special to someone without going out on a limb and risking to displease many others. In this particular case, it worked for me. In many others that have their fair share of devoted followers, I didn't enjoy it. It is in any case more interesting than movies who are adjusted to the lowest common denominator :)

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[deleted]

I appreciate everyone's intelligent discussion about this film. For me, I agree with the original poster. I appreciate what the film's message is - and even how that message is portrayed - but in the end, I did not enjoy the experience. To each their own.

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I found it artistic, but too much so. In other words, the director was trying too hard to be artistic and the framing of scenes from train windows or in art galleries, for example, became too trite and cliche.
The metaphysical conversations and Taichi exercises also seemed like a poor emulation of Miyagi Sensei from Karate Kid. There was nothing deep there.
I kept waiting to see if there was going to be anything else in the movie, while my wife was telling me to turn it off because it wasn't going anywhere or going to mean anything more than the overdone artistic scenes. My wife was right, and we feel like we were robbed of an hour and 40 minutes.

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(....)my wife was telling me to turn it off because
it wasn't going nowhere or going to mean anything(...)
My wife was right,and we feel like we were robbed of an
hour and 40 minutes.
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You and your wife are totally freakin'wrong!!!!!!!!!!!!

You weren't robbed of an hour and 40 minutes....
it's more like you were robbed one hour and fifthy minutes!!


And mister,your wife's a genius!lol.

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"Life has no limits and cannot be controlled"? WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU TRYING TO SAY?

That is complete and utter nonsense, Black Rider. Life does have limits and CAN and IS being controlled, each and every day, day in, day out. Look at the mass media, look at the air transportation industry, look at the necessity of working for a living to attain what one wants materially. Life is all about limits and control. Everyone dies, everyone has limits, can break, can fall ill, and has limits to their personal abilities in each and every respect.

What a childish, stupid message. It's no even true, and stupid even as a falsehood. Go back to your cave, trog.

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[deleted]

well said.

i love indie films and have appreciated Jim Jarmusch's work in the past, but this one bored me to tears. i don't have a compulsive need to glean a message from a film, or to necessarily have it 'tidy' and 'finished', but i thought this movie was a self-indulgent wank. and a tedious one at that.

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Yeah, I have to agree with wdawson: it's just a boring, mind-numbingly tedious, self-indulgent work. I won't say it's a piece of crap; but I didn't like it. I feel like I really needed to be on the verge of falling asleep to get into it. But of course, I just fell asleep.

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Yes... I totally agree with wdawson-1, the movie really is a self-indulgent wank!

I also enjoy slow and strange movies, but this was like some inside joke or some very cryptic art history lesson. It was absolute torture to sit through this an old theater without air-conditioning, ugh.

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One of George Orwell's favourite jokes was about a young man who had just left university. An aunt asks him what he is going to do,
"I am going to write."
"That's nice, dear. What are you going to write about?"
"One doesn't write about anything. One just writes."

There are people- and Jim Jarmusch is one- who doesn't make films about anything except, perhaps, other films.The Limits of Control simply takes the whole formula of an assassination thriller and treats it as a string on which to put a series of performances. Hitchcock used the word "Maguffin" to describe the arbitrary basis for the plot of a thriller; here the whole plot is the maguffin on which Jarmusch puts his series of arbitrary and random scenes. The film isn't about anything but itself and it is its own meaning or lack of meaning. After all, why should a film mean anything or be about anything any more than an abstract painting or a piece of music?

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guy ritchie's revolver > jim jarmusch's limits of control.

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[deleted]

slight edit-Guy Ritchie's ORIGINAL UK CUT of Revolver > Limits of Control.

Not that US cut, not as powerful.

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Not as bad as that, I hope. All the same, it's one of Jarmusch's least interesting films, perhaps because it uses a not very interesting genre as its basis.

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[deleted]

babyxfirefly, I've read through this thread briefly and I haven't come across an opinion that matches my own.

The title, "The Limits of Control," references the everyday lives of people being controlled from behind the curtains. The world's globalization in recent years has created corporate empires in place of nations. In that time, Jaramusch argues that culture is being sapped from society in the form of great artists, films, scientists, philosophers, etc. Everything is now packaged and delivered to us.

Jaramusch's film (and title) state that imagination is the limit to what can be controlled by external forces. Even if everything else is outside of your control, no one can ever control your imagination. That is always yours.

The film's ending pieces it all together quite nicely. Bill Murray and the compound he's in act as a metaphor.


Not only is it possible, it is essential
http://paulopicks.blogspot.com/

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It is not my place to say that you should appreciate this film. All I can do is tell you why I did. Firstly, it makes you think. Nothing is spelt out and, as a consequence, the viewer has to work harder than with many films. I enjoy this process, of feeling like a detective, trying to discover something as I'm watching a film. Not 'what's going to happen next?', but what is the significance of this?... what is the connection between these things?...

I believe that the film should be assessed mainly against the director's intentions. I don't KNOW for sure what this is, but you can make some assumptions. The repetition of scenes, the soporific atmosphere, the short exchanges with enigmatic characters, each talking in a similar way, the appearance, and re-appearance of the nude, and the fact the loner never seems to eat or sleep, all lend themselves to a dream-like quality. Dream content is strongly symbolic, (as is artistic content) which would explain why the film is shot in this way, and why the visits to the gallery are used as a parallel to his progress. The repeated behaviour, and therefore images of, for example, the two espressos and the eating of the paper, don't necessarily need to be symbolic of something specific themselves. But being repetively used, they lend themselves to the overall dream-like quality that the director was aiming for. On the other hand maybe the espresso cups are specifically symbolic, but for something that I haven't realised, and that is especially relevant for the main character, whose dream we seem to be in.

I have to admit, I did feel a little impatient after 20 minutes or so. The DVD box said thriller, and it listed many well-know actors, so I was waiting for it all to kick off. My girlfriend fell asleep after 45 minutes or so, and I can understand why... it's a sleepy film. But I reckon it's probably one that I'll get even more from on the second viewing. Sounds like many people would laugh at the idea of watching it again. Oh well... their loss.

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Easily one of the worst, most self indulgent movies I have ever seen.

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My girlfriend fell asleep after 45 minutes or so
(...)
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Mister,your girlfriend's a genius!lol.

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I don't agree that it makes you think. It didn`t make me think of anything other than coming to this website (with an hour to go until the end) to find out if there was any point in persevering with it. So, in fact I am wrong - it did make me think. And while I am thinking, I will add that it is pretentious in the extreme to expect people to pay to sit through something that they can just as easily see happening out on the street while they drink two espressos from separate cups, which would of course be much cheaper. Especially if they already live in Spain.

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You yourself as you, did exactly that, by writing this. That is, isulting that which you call intelligence, that is.

I'm better than you.

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I totally agree with you! My cable company had this listed as a "Three Star" movie. I'd give it a one. My wife left the room after about five minutes - I should have done the same. The best part of the movie was the nude girl!

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My wife left the room after five minutes(...)
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Your wife is a very intelligent woman!lol.

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