- Nowhere (film)
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Nowhere Directed by Gregg Araki Produced by Gregg Araki
Andrea SperlingWritten by Gregg Araki Starring James Duval
Rachel True
Chiara Mastroianni
Debi Mazar
Kathleen Robertson
Denise Richards
Jordan Ladd
Christina Applegate
Guillermo Díaz
Jeremy Jordan
Ryan Phillippe
Heather Graham
Staci Keanan
Scott Caan
Mena Suvari
Traci Lords
Shannen Doherty
Rose McGowan
Beverly D'AngeloCinematography Arturo Smith Distributed by Fine Line Features Release date(s) May 9, 1997 Running time 85 minutes Country United States
FranceLanguage English Box office $194,201[1] Nowhere is a 1997 film by director and screenwriter Gregg Araki. It stars James Duval and Rachel True as Dark and Mel, a bisexual teen couple who are both sexually promiscuous.
The film is part of a series of three films by Araki nicknamed the "Teenage Apocalypse Trilogy". The other films in that trilogy are, in order, Totally Fucked Up (1993) and The Doom Generation (1995), with Nowhere being the third and last. It is highly sexual and contains scenes of graphic violence. The film is notable in that it features a variety of actors who had, at the time, not yet reached their current level of stardom. Among them are Heather Graham, Ryan Phillippe, Mena Suvari, Kathleen Robertson, and Denise Richards.
Also in keeping with Araki's film making tradition, various celebrities from the past 40 years make unexpected cameos. Included are Shannen Doherty, Charlotte Rae, Debi Mazar, Jordan Ladd, Christina Applegate, Jeremy Jordan, Jaason Simmons, Beverly D'Angelo, Eve Plumb, Christopher Knight, Traci Lords, Rose McGowan, John Ritter, Staci Keanan, Devon Odessa, Chiara Mastroianni, the Brewer twins and Brian Buzzini.
Contents
Plot
Dark Smith (James Duval) is an alienated, 18-year-old man struggling with daily life, fluctuating romantic status with his bisexual, polyamorous girlfriend Mel (Rachel True) and conflicting feelings for a shy gay classmate, Montgomery (Nathan Bexton). The day starts off normally enough with Dark meeting up with his friends which include the intelligent Dingbat (Christina Applegate), Montgomery, Mel and her purple-haired, acid-tongued lesbian lover Lucifer (Kathleen Robertson) for breakfast at their local coffeehouse hangout, The Hole. Various mentions of a party at Jujyfruit's along with plans for a drug-fueled game of kick the can are made and the film segues into portions of the goings-on of the lives of the other characters in the film.
- Cowboy (Guillermo Díaz) is another one of Dark's best friends; he is a gay rock musician struggling with balancing his band duties and his bandmate/boyfriend Bart (Jeremy Jordan), who is heavily addicted to drugs supplied by Handjob.
- Egg (Sarah Lassez) is a young girl who becomes starstruck, resulting in an inadvertent meeting with a heartthrob television star (Jaason Simmons) who winds up being more than she had planned for.
- Shad (Ryan Phillippe) and Lilith (Heather Graham) are a nihilistic couple, crazed with sex and lust for life, and their segments are little more than clips that serve to illustrate this. Shad is Alyssa's twin brother.
- Alyssa (Jordan Ladd) and Elvis are another couple touched on only briefly. In contrast to her brother's rather indicatively violent nature Alyssa is more demure, coquettish, and sweet. Her boyfriend Elvis (Thyme Lewis), a biker, is apparently flaky in his romantic commitment to Alyssa. Elvis has a sadomasochistic streak and as is exhibited towards the end of the film, capable of extreme violence.
- Zero (Joshua Gibran Mayweather), Mel's younger brother, and Zoe (played by Mena Suvari in her first film role) are high schoolers, implied through dialogue to be sexually active though underage. Zero wants to impress Zoe by taking her to Jujyfruit's party but has some difficulty, in addition to further difficulties that arise in regard to arriving at the party.
- Cowboy's boyfriend Bart's interaction with his drug dealer Handjob and his two S&M mistresses, Kriss (Chiara Mastroianni) & Kozy, who mutilate Bart despite his extreme state of drug intoxication.
- Dingbat's airheaded social butterfly role coupled with her crush on Ducky (Scott Caan) makes her a major supporting character and keeps her involved throughout the story. She's friends with Ducky's sister Egg and she, along with Egg and Alyssa, have eating disorders (binging and purging, anorexia, and drug-induced appetite suppression).
As all of these plot lines develop, the story progresses towards the oft-mentioned party at Jujyfruit's house. A bacchanalian orgy of excess, drinking, drugs, and friends, strangers, nobodies and somebodies, all pushed together and put under pressure. Here the film descends from the innocuous and normal beginning with natural lighting and balanced visuals to very sureal, sharply contrasted and/or colored lighting, and seemingly hallucinatory visions and surrealistic visuals and events as well as chaotic and/or subjectively improbable happenings and reaches its chaotic and penultimate finale where some of the issues in the plot come to a head. Dark and Mel argue about her desire to have an open relationship and Dark's desire for commitment. Zero and Zoe are ambushed by the Atari Gang on their way to Jujyfruit's house and their car, belonging to Zero's mother, is stolen while they are left helpless on the side of the road. Egg and Bart, separately watching the same televangelist (John Ritter), both decide the world is too messed up to live in and they commit suicide to reach heaven. Ducky receives word of his sister's death and attempts to drown himself in a swimming pool, but is saved by Dark and Dingbat. Bart's drug dealer Handjob is beaten to death by Elvis for selling them cut drugs, and Dark, covered in blood from his proximity to it, returns home, where Montgomery, escaped from the aliens that had abducted him during the game of kick the can, comes to Dark's window and asks if he can come in. The pair discuss their mutual attraction for one another and Montgomery asks Dark if he can spend the night. Dark agrees but makes Montgomery promise he'll never leave him. They are seen in a momentary loving embrace before Montgomery begins uncontrollably coughing. As Dark shakes him to try to get him to stop, Montgomery explodes in a shower of flesh and blood and a cockroach-like alien who had apparently been using him as a host, turns to Dark and says, "I'm outta here," before crawling out the window, leaving Dark covered in blood and staring at the camera while the credits begin to roll.
Availability
- USA: Available in VHS format. There has never been a Region 1 DVD available.
- UK: a Region 2 DVD exists; it has no special features.
- France: Region 2 DVD, with either French audio or original audio with French subtitles (depending on the DVD player, it can be difficult to turn the subtitles off). It has no special features except for a French trailer.
- Australia: Region 4 DVD.
Soundtrack
The soundtrack of the film, Nowhere: Music from the Gregg Araki Movie, was released on Mercury Records.
See also
References
- ^ Nowhere - Box Office Mojo Retrieved 2010-05-27.
External links
Films directed by Gregg Araki Three Bewildered People in the Night · The Long Weekend (O' Despair) · The Living End · Totally Fucked Up · The Doom Generation · Nowhere · Splendor · Mysterious Skin · Smiley Face · KaboomCategories:- English-language films
- 1997 films
- Alien visitation films
- American black comedy films
- Bisexuality-related films
- American comedy-drama films
- American comedy science fiction films
- Drug-related films
- Independent films
- American LGBT-related films
- 1990s comedy films
- Teen films
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