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Synopsis

Fans of the short stories in Denis Johnson’s Jesus’ Son will wonder how anyone could film a book so beautifully, radiantly, defiantly strange. The good news is that Alison Maclean’s film version is more than just faithful to the book’s spirit: It’s the closest thing to a visual equivalent of Johnson’s visionary prose. As a series of vignettes in the life of an unnamed Midwestern junkie-slash-holy fool, the stories are linked more through imagery than through anything so linear as a plot. Maclean preserves this episodic structure but adds just enough narrative glue to make the whole thing hang together as a film. (And wisely so; if she hadn’t, there’d have been no role at all for Samantha Morton, brilliant here as Michelle, the narrator’s girlfriend.) With a hero called Fuckhead, you know this isn’t going to be entertainment for the whole family, and some of the scenes of drug use and associated gore are grim indeed. But the movie looks just right, and some of its images are so beautiful it hurts: old movies playing in an empty drive-in, snow swirling all around; a naked woman parasailing through the sky with her long red hair streaming behind.

Maclean also coaxes wonderful performances from a dream-indie cast, including Morton, the magnetic Billy Crudup as Fuckhead, Dennis Hopper, Holly Hunter, an uncharacteristically understated Denis Leary, and even, in a gruesome cameo, Denis Johnson himself. (Hint: Look for the knife. Then look away quickly.) Once again, Jack Black hijacks every frame in which he appears, and his turn as a pill-popping orderly gives new meaning to the phrase “I save lives.” Things drag a little during the last half-hour, but squirm not: Following Fuckhead through rehab and beyond, the book’s closing scenes are genuinely redemptive without hitting the audience over the head with a “lesson” of any kind. Jesus’ Son is Maclean’s first feature film since 1992’s Crush; let’s hope she won’t make us wait as long before the next fix. —amazon.com

Director

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Alison Maclean

Alison Maclean is a Canadian film director of music videos, short films, television (episodes of Sex & the City, The Tudors, Homicide: Life On the Street), commercials and feature films. Her works include the music video Torn (Natalie Imbruglia, 1998), the short film Kitchen Sink (1989) and the feature films Jesus’ Son (1999) starring Billy Crudup and Crush (1992) starring Marcia Gay Harden.

Alison Maclean was born in Ottawa, Canada, in 1958, to New Zealand-born parents.

Her first short film, Kitchen Sink, a surreal suburban nightmare, debuted in Cannes in 1989 and won eight international awards. Maclean moved to New York in 1992. Her film Crush was entered into the 1992 Cannes Film Festival. After several years developing projects she got her second feature, Jesus’ Son (1999), starring Billy Crudup and Samantha Morton (with Holly Hunter, Dennis Hopper, Denis Leary and Jack Black… read more

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Michael Gildea

16Apr11

If for no other reason, Jesus' Son is a great portrayal of a drug person as it gets really dull once its protagonist gets clean. The random and hilarious series of vignettes are often wildly entertaining despite the fact they give the great cast only a short time to shine. This movie's full of great and heartbreaking moments too. So worth the time...

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bees can see ultraviolet light

13Oct10

Talk into my bullet hole and tell me I'm fine.

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