Watch: Jesus’ Son 1999 123movies, Full Movie Online – A gentle and usually mellow young man, who sometimes knows things before they happen and gets vibes of premonition, tell us his story: how he met Michelle in Iowa in 1971, how he got the name Fuckhead, how she introduced him to heroin and their falling in love, his thieving, his hospital work and their time in Chicago when she gets pregnant, detox, going to Phoenix to live, AA meetings and a dance, working at a care center where he learns to touch the residents, and modifying his daily schedule so that he passes a neighboring Mennonite household at the right time to hear the wife sing Gospel songs in the shower. Slowly, very slowly, FH lets his gifts emerge..
Plot: A young man turns from drug addiction and petty crime to a life redeemed by a discovery of compassion.
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6.9/10 Votes: 7,248 | |
79% | RottenTomatoes | |
76/100 | MetaCritic | |
N/A Votes: 55 Popularity: 4.653 | TMDB |
A neglected classic.
This film was buried here- apart from the acclaim in ‘Uncut’ magazine; I didn’t manage to see this ’til this year. My initial viewing was a little underwhelmed- being a fan of Johnson’s book I had worked this up to impossible heights in my mind. However, on a second viewing I enjoyed the film more- the nouvelle-vague via Scorsese editing & structure seemed much better 2nd time around.The film is closest to ‘Drugstore Cowboy’- though parts such as the split-screen or the digital editing as F***head takes pills in the Emergency Room could have come from ‘Requiem for a Dream’. The source stories have been extended and made more cohesive- as with the adaptation of Hubert Selby Jr’s ‘Last Exit to Brooklyn’ by Uli Edel.
The film is wonderfully shot- a great scene is the drive-in/cemetery that plays ‘Carnival of Souls’ (though I thought I saw Samantha Morton caught in an almost Anton ‘Depeche Mode’ Corbijin style!); imagine ‘Zabriskie Point’ without the metaphysical masturbation…
The acting is uniformly great- Crudup & Morton are fantastic leads, while Denis Leary, Greg Germann, Holly Hunter are among the excellent supports. The short Dennis Hopper shaving scene is one of the greatest pieces of cinema I have seen in recent years; while Jack Black almost steals the film with his amusing “listen to my shoes”. And Denis Johnson is great as hunting knife in eye guy. Oh and Will Patton pops up as ‘John Smith’- still he was in ‘The Postman’, so not quite yet forgiven.
The soundtrack (chosen by Johnson) is great- Neil Young’s ‘Cowgirl in the Sand’, Wilco’s ‘Airline to Heaven’ & ‘She’s a Jar’, ‘Hang on Sloopy’ and the great score. The highlight is Morton’s gyrating dance to ‘Oh Sweet Pea’- almost as great as that dance scene ripped off for ‘Pulp Fiction’ from Godard’s ‘Bande a Part’.Only quibble is- where was ‘Heroin’ by The Velvet Underground?
‘Jesus’ Son’ is a touching, funny, and tender film that deserves to find an audience. There are too many great moments here- Hunter’s arm waving in the air, Beverly Home, the Amish, the laundry scene, the ER scene, the rabbits roadtrip etc. Terribly depressing that mediocrity like ‘Human Traffic’ & ‘Trainspotting’ finds an audience here- but a film like this isn’t allowed to (except at a few arthouse cinemas). Pity- and Alison MacLean’s debut ‘Crush’ is also excellent; here’s to possible adaptations of Denis Johnson’s ‘Already Dead’ & ‘The Name of the World’- by David Lynch and Paul Schrader respectively (hopefully)…Check out Johnson’s books- as this film’s use of voiceover stems right from them.
A smart-ass soundtrack for a life of squalor…
Billy Crudup, as an aimless young screw-up and pill-popper in 1970s Chicago, has the mannerisms of a user down right, yet he doesn’t convince as an addict. While riding on the dirty subway cars in the darkened city, interacting with the street life and the strays he seems to attract, Crudup certainly has the appropriate glassy-eyed expression and sheepish grin, but he’s too lean and muscular and healthy-looking to be taken for a troubled junkie. The film, an adaptation of Denis Johnson’s book of short stories, has been fairly well realized by director Alison Maclean (who has a vivid eye for detail); unfortunately, the protagonist isn’t really a character at all, and this isn’t entirely Crudup’s fault. He hasn’t been conceived as anything but a walking foul up, one with fabricated answers and–in his narration–‘deep thoughts’ soaked in the smugness of an elevated consciousness. Many stars help out in support, yet the film is less a dramatic achievement than an arty, somewhat indifferent passel of scenes. ** from ****
Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 47 min (107 min)
Budget 2500000
Revenue 1300000
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Drama
Director Alison Maclean
Writer Denis Johnson, Elizabeth Cuthrell, David Urrutia
Actors Billy Crudup, Robert Michael Kelly, Torben Brooks
Country Canada, United States
Awards 4 wins & 7 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix Dolby
Aspect Ratio 2.35 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process Super 35
Printed Film Format 35 mm (anamorphic)