VideoDetective.com
Mystery Train (1989)
Released By: Orion Home Video   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
Your video will start shortly...



More Videos:
Preview Details
User Reviews
Studio: Orion Home Video
Genre: Comedy
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Jim Jarmusch
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Elizabeth Bracco, Joe Strummer, Masatoshi Nagase, Nicoletta Braschi, Rick Aviles, Screamin' Jay Hawkins
Published ID: 1104
UPC: 027616806321,
Plot: Written and directed by the ever-unpredictable Jim Jarmusch, Mystery Train is comprised of three short anecdotes involving foreign tourists in Tennessee. Each story is set in a fleabag Memphis hotel which has been redressed as a tribute to Elvis Presley. Story #1 involves two Japanese tourists whose devotion to Elvis blinds them of everything around them. Story #2 finds eternal victim Nicoletta Braschi sharing a room with stone-broke Elizabeth Bracco and having her problems solved by a spectral vision of The King. And story #3 offers the further misadventures of Bracco, her no-good boyfriend and her dysfunctional family. Any film that features Screamin' Jay Hawkins as a hotel clerk has us squarely in its pocket. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Elvis' Ghost Takes a Mystery Train
Added 11/26/2008

In three short vignettes, visitors of Memphis travel to the decrepit world of Elvis the King. A Japanese couple come the US to see Memphis for the King. The woman is entranced even by the run down ugliness of the Memphis train station and the deteriorating city. Her boyfriend is more interested in Carl Perkins. One visit to a tourist trap (Sun Records) leaves them deflated as they attempt to listen to a tour guide who speaks too fast for them the comprehend even basic concepts in English. Memphis may have the king but Memphis is not the most welcoming city on the planet. In the second story, an Italian woman who stops overnight from a trip back to Rome ends up into being suckered into buying an enormous number of magazine and newspapers and paying for an American woman's hotel room for the night. She shows the hospitality that the Americans don't seem to share. The third story involves three losers who go out drinking and decide to rob a liquor store. All of these people end up spending a night in a fleabag hotel decorated in Elvis memorabilia. The ghost of Elvis watches over everyone and is ever present. An interesting film by Jim Jarmusch, a director who nowadays might never see the light of day but was celebrated during a time period when new directors such as Spike Lee, etc. were coming out of film school and independent films were the rage.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Jarmusch's best film
Added 1/30/2008

I'm not much of a fan of Jim Jarmusch, but 1989's Mystery Train (his fourth film and first one in color) is quite engaging in they way it tells three minimalist stories occurring in what is presumably the seedier side of Memphis. An Elvis motif runs through all the episodes, which are set mostly in a rundown hotel during one night (Blues legend Screaming Jay Hawkins plays the clerk). In the first episode, a young Japanese couple arrives in the town which gave birth to rock and roll (she is quirky, he is impassive; she loves Elvis, he Carl Perkins). In the second episode, an Italian woman (Niccoleta Braschi) whose husband has just died has to spend a night in Memphis. She shares the room in the hotel with a talkative American woman (Elizabeth Bracco). During the night, she imagines or sees the ghost of Elvis. In the third episode, a British guy who is called Elvis by his lowlife friends, and who has just broken with the woman of the second episode (and is played by the late Clash guitarist Joe Strummer) more or less accidentally shots a liquor shop seller, and has to take refuge in the hotel, along with his brother in law (played by Steve Buscemi). A gunshot heard during the night sort of links the three episodes. Nothing much happens, but Jarmusch shows his love with American pop culture and his fine ear for the way the American working class talk everyday.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Quiet, beautiful, funny, friendly - touching
Added 9/22/2007

This movie, woven around two Japanese kids looking for Elvis more or less, in some nondescript Southern city - I don't know what to say. The city itself is protrayed emotionally flat - kind of like what you'd see on a trip to your own drugstore. But that makes it all the more intriguing.

There's several stories going on, woven around the quest for Elvis.

The places seemed too familiar - and I found myself wondering if I'd been to those place, met those people ... but I haven't - and won't - until I watch this flick again, which I will.

It's too much of a friendly place not to return. Set off by hints of larceny, physical danger and sex, and where we find that we can take these people's quest for Elvis in stride.

0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Elvis! No, Carl Perkins! No, Elvis! No, Carl Perkins!
Added 9/4/2006

Mystery Train follows three stories through the heat of dreary summertime Memphis. Two Japanese teens dressed to the nines in 80s couture explore Memphis on a quest to determine once and for all whether Elvis or Carl Perkins was the true king of American rock and roll. They are awkwardly out of place amongst the townsfolk, but even more out of place with each other. She constantly jokes and jokes with him, at one point smearing lipstick across his face, only to be continuously ignored as he stares coolly into the distance. Their depressing love making scene in the seedy hotel where all the characters end up underscores the distance between them.

An Italian woman has an unexpected layover in Memphis related to the seemingly sudden and unexplained death of her husband. She tries to quietly navigate her way through the town, but is faced with con artists at every turn. She ends up sharing a room in the seedy hotel with a chatty local girl on the run from her allegedly crazy boyfriend and, as the only character indifferent to American pop culture, ironically ends up being woken in the night by a vision of Elvis.

The local girl's boyfriend sullenly drinks himself belligerent at a local bar with two friends. After being kicked out for getting too rowdy, the three take off in a pickup truck and rob a liquor store, unexpectedly shooting the clerk. They hide out in the same seedy hotel. Steve Buscemi is, as usual, a fabulous loser everyman who gets the brunt of the punishment for all their half-witted schemes.

The highlight of the movie for me was the bold and hilarious Screamin' Jay Hawkins who mans the desk at the seedy hotel. He continuously torments his bellhop, making fun of his hat and tricking him out of the Japanese plum he receives as a tip from the Japanese tourists. "You got any more Japanese plums? Or other exotic fruits from around the world?"

Overall, the movie is fun and watchable whether you want to read meaning into the connections between the storylines or not. It's an elegant collage of cultural clichés and a humorous look at the pursuit of superficial dreams.

0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Memphis Blues
Added 1/30/2006


A quirky minimalist movie by Jim Jarmusch that is well thought out and cleverly devised that will leave viewers either fascinated or cold. It takes place during a single night in Memphis, and revolves around three unconnected storylines: a Japanese couple on a "pilgrimage" to Elvis shrines, an Italian woman whose flight back to Rome has been delayed, and a trio of young sleazes who get drunk and shoot a liquor store owner. They all spend the night at a fleabag hotel (The Arcade, run by Screamin' Jay Hawkins!). Jarmusch's use of flashback, a la RASHOMON, is clever and inspired. But Jarmush also likes to use long takes of scenes in which virtually nothing happens, which can make the movie feel long and ponderous. It's still the best of his movies, though.

5 out of 6 people found this helpful.
Elvis' Ghost Takes a Mystery Train
Added 11/26/2008

In three short vignettes, visitors of Memphis travel to the decrepit world of Elvis the King. A Japanese couple come the US to see Memphis for the King. The woman is entranced even by the run down ugliness of the Memphis train station and the deteriorating city. Her boyfriend is more interested in Carl Perkins. One visit to a tourist trap (Sun Records) leaves them deflated as they attempt to listen to a tour guide who speaks too fast for them the comprehend even basic concepts in English. Memphis may have the king but Memphis is not the most welcoming city on the planet. In the second story, an Italian woman who stops overnight from a trip back to Rome ends up into being suckered into buying an enormous number of magazine and newspapers and paying for an American woman's hotel room for the night. She shows the hospitality that the Americans don't seem to share. The third story involves three losers who go out drinking and decide to rob a liquor store. All of these people end up spending a night in a fleabag hotel decorated in Elvis memorabilia. The ghost of Elvis watches over everyone and is ever present. An interesting film by Jim Jarmusch, a director who nowadays might never see the light of day but was celebrated during a time period when new directors such as Spike Lee, etc. were coming out of film school and independent films were the rage.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Jarmusch's best film
Added 1/30/2008

I'm not much of a fan of Jim Jarmusch, but 1989's Mystery Train (his fourth film and first one in color) is quite engaging in they way it tells three minimalist stories occurring in what is presumably the seedier side of Memphis. An Elvis motif runs through all the episodes, which are set mostly in a rundown hotel during one night (Blues legend Screaming Jay Hawkins plays the clerk). In the first episode, a young Japanese couple arrives in the town which gave birth to rock and roll (she is quirky, he is impassive; she loves Elvis, he Carl Perkins). In the second episode, an Italian woman (Niccoleta Braschi) whose husband has just died has to spend a night in Memphis. She shares the room in the hotel with a talkative American woman (Elizabeth Bracco). During the night, she imagines or sees the ghost of Elvis. In the third episode, a British guy who is called Elvis by his lowlife friends, and who has just broken with the woman of the second episode (and is played by the late Clash guitarist Joe Strummer) more or less accidentally shots a liquor shop seller, and has to take refuge in the hotel, along with his brother in law (played by Steve Buscemi). A gunshot heard during the night sort of links the three episodes. Nothing much happens, but Jarmusch shows his love with American pop culture and his fine ear for the way the American working class talk everyday.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Quiet, beautiful, funny, friendly - touching
Added 9/22/2007

This movie, woven around two Japanese kids looking for Elvis more or less, in some nondescript Southern city - I don't know what to say. The city itself is protrayed emotionally flat - kind of like what you'd see on a trip to your own drugstore. But that makes it all the more intriguing.

There's several stories going on, woven around the quest for Elvis.

The places seemed too familiar - and I found myself wondering if I'd been to those place, met those people ... but I haven't - and won't - until I watch this flick again, which I will.

It's too much of a friendly place not to return. Set off by hints of larceny, physical danger and sex, and where we find that we can take these people's quest for Elvis in stride.

0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Photos


There are currently no photos.
Shopping
IDPriceImageUrlPurchaseUrlIdTypeBindingStore
VHS
$0.48 @ Amazon
DVD
$3.00 @ Amazon
VHS
@ Amazon