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Disc #1 -- Night on Earth
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Los Angeles
New York
Paris
Rome
Helsinki
Q&A With Jim
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Richmond, VA
Chicago, IL
"No Given City"
Hämeenlinna, Finland
Kitchener, Ontario
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Toronto, Ontario
Anaheim, CA
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Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan
Auckland, New Zealand
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Introduction
Alice: Magazine Européen
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Subtitles
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Chapters
Disc #1 -- Night on Earth
1. Los Angeles [10:57]
2. Mr. Kincaid [4:22]
3. "I Yam What I Yam" [4:28]
4. A Brilliant Streak [2:44]
5. Movie Star [4:41]
6. New York [6:32]
7. Helmut and YoYo [4:44]
8. Angela! [3:50]
9. The Last Word [3:26]
10. Two Rights [5:43]
11. Paris [5:20]
12. Preferred Route [4:40]
13. Curiousity [6:06]
14. "Are You Blind or What?" [3:01]
15. Rome [5:53]
16. No Smoking [3:55]
17. Confession [5:42]
18. Pumpkins, Sheep, My Sister-in-Law [10:46]
19. Helsinki [3:45]
20. Bad Day [7:53]
21. "Things Could Have Been Worse" [19:33]
Features
New, restored high-definition digital transfer, supervised and approved by director Jim Jarmusch
Selected-scene commentary by director of photography Frederick Elmes and location sound mixer Drew Kunin
Q&A with Jarmusch, in which he responds to questions sent by fans
1992 Belgian television interview with Jarmusch
New and improved English subtitle translation
Plus: A booklet featuring new essays by Thom Andersen, Paul Auster, Bernard Eisenschitz, Goffredo Fofi, and Peter Von Bagh, and the lyrics to Tom Wait's original songs from the film
Possibly the most mainstream film to date by the laconic, impressionistic filmmaker Jim Jarmusch, this agreeable (if overlong) project works in fits and starts, which is to be expected in a film that is so episodic in nature. However, Jarmusch's acute eye for detail and his offbeat casting choices (including a pre-fame Roberto Benigni) pay off. The tone of the film is more lighthearted and playful than Jarmusch's previous efforts, but still retains his trademark minimalist style. One of the main contributors to the film's unerring sense of time and place is ace cinematographer Frederick Elmes, whose previous work with David Lynch and John Cassavetes proves notable here, where even the inside of a cab has an strange and inviting veneer. ~ Jason Clark, Rovi
Frederick Elmes : Best Cinematography - Independent Spirit Awards, 1992