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Synopsis

John, a recent Yale graduate, moves to Los Angeles to begin a life on his own and pursue a writing career. John’s credo, learned from his Uncle Darr, “Don’t feel anything for anyone.” Floating from job to job and attempting to live a life of detachment, John is forced to share his apartment with geeky Andrew, who only annoys as he struggles to ingratiate himself with John and his buddies. These three work a temp job together, pulling and sorting carbon credit card slips. One day, fed up with the current situation, John flies off the handle and quits. John is soon working for a sleazy father and son slumlord team, and meets Bevan, an oversexed, alcoholic vixen in distress. He spends his days fixing plumbing and evicting tenants and his nights drinking at the local bar. But when unexpected tragedy intervenes, John is finally forced to confront what makes an artist and a man. –inbaseline

Director

Original

George Hickenlooper

The films of the American director George Hickenlooper, who has died unexpectedly aged 47, straddled several genres, but he will be best remembered as a documentary maker thanks to his most celebrated work, Hearts of Darkness: A Film-maker’s Apocalypse (1991). This riveting account of the troubled gestation of Francis Ford Coppola’s Vietnam war epic Apocalypse Now (1979) combined behind-the-scenes footage shot by Coppola’s wife, Eleanor, with retrospective accounts by the cast and crew.

Hickenlooper observed “a strong parallel between Francis making the movie and the war itself. He really delved into the most sordid aspects of his own character.” As Apocalypse Now‘s budget and schedule ran out of control – and its leading man, Martin Sheen, had a heart attack – Coppola was consumed by fears and self-doubt, as captured in the documentary. “There were too many of us, we had access to too much equipment, too much money, and little by little we went insane… read more

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