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Man of Flowers

Australia

1983

91 Min
Color
1.78:1
English
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
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DIR Paul Cox

PROD Jane Ballantyne, Paul Cox

SCR Paul Cox

DP Nino Gaetano Martinetti

CAST Norman Kaye, Alyson Best, Chris Haywood, Sarah Walker, Julia Blake, Bob Ellis

ED Tim Lewis

PROD DES Asher Bilu

SOUND Terry Rodman

Cannes (Un Certain Regard)

Synopsis

Charles Bremer (Norman Kaye) is a very rich man who lives in a gated mansion filled, museum-/mausoleum-like, with fine art and flowers. He appears to leave his home rarely and only to perform a limited number of tasks. He plays the organ at the church across the street, goes to the flower market, takes walks in the park to gaze upon nude bronzes, posts letters daily to his dead mother, takes an art class, and visits his psychiatrist. Into this narrowly circumscribed existence are admitted a homespun philosopher of a postman, a clumsy maid, and most recently, a young girl named Lisa (Alyson Best) who we see in the opening scene leave her slum neighborhood, go with Charles to his home, and strip naked while an aria from Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor plays in the background. Her performance rouses him out of his easy chair and over to the church, where his orgasmic cacophony of organ music shakes the church walls. —http://www.ferdyonfilms.com/

Director

Original

Paul Cox

Dutch-born filmmaker Paul Cox settled in his adopted homeland of Australia in the mid-1960s and spent over thirty years there honing his craft before becoming disillusioned with the difficulties in raising financing and decamped for Europe. Cox’s oeuvre is comprised of mostly cerebral work that challenges audiences and fly in the face of conventional Hollywood fare.

When Cox first settled in Australia, he enjoyed some notice as a photographer. He also was pursuing the hobby of making Super 8 films and eventually moved into filmmaking, first with “Matuta” (1965) which was followed by a long string of documentaries and short films. In 1976, he directed his first feature film “Illuminations” and then gained international attention with the charming but offbeat romance “Lonely Hearts” (1981). Cox’s particular blend of verite and artifice in his subsequent work, though, often divided critics who found his efforts well-acted if somewhat slowly paced and talky. His films, including… read more

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Picture of Dzimas

Dzimas

27Apr10

Looks like the staff found a better picture than I was able to submit. It's been years since I saw this movie, but liked it at the time.

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