My Blueberry Nights
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Wong Kar Wai
Frankie Faison
Hector A Leguillow
Jude Law
Natalie Portman
Rachel Weisz
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
After a rough break-up, Elizabeth sets out on a journey across America, leaving behind a life of memories, a dream and a soulful new friend; a cafe owner--all while in search of something to mend her broken heart. Waitressing her way through the country, Elizabeth befriends others whose yearnings are greater than hers, including a troubled cop and his estranged wife and a down-on-her luck gambler with a score to settle. Through these individuals, Elizabeth witnesses the true depths of loneliness and emptiness, and begins to understand that her own journey is part of a greater exploration within herself.
Director
Wong Kar Wai
Cast
Frankie Faison
Hector A Leguillow
Jude Law
Natalie Portman
Rachel Weisz
Charles Clayton Blackwell
Cat Power
Tracy Elizabeth Blackwell
Norah Jones
Sam Hill
Adriane Lenox
Chad R Davis
Benjamin Kanes
Michael Delano
Jesse Garon
Audrei Kairen
Demetrius Butler
Michael Hartnett
Michael May
John Malloy
David Strathairn
Bill Coggon
Bill Hollis
Chris Vogt
Katya Blumenberg
Crew
Olga Abramson
Kristen Adams
Terry Adams
Josh Adeniji
Mark Agnes
Jill Alexander
Josh Allen
Michael Anderson
Chan Chi Wai Andy
Patiporn Anuvanitrutravate
Robert Arietta
Pierre Arson
Robert J Babin
Michael Baird
Michael Baird
Jeremy Balko
Randall Balsmeyer
Shawn Batey
Bobby Beckles
Terri Bella
Braden Belmonte
Gloria Belz
Brook Benton
Laura Berning
Nathan Black
Taylor Black
Lawrence Block
Katya Blumenberg
Danielle Blumstein
Sheila Bock
Kinney Booker
Alex Borys
Kevin P. Boyd
Brad Boyer
Henry Boyle
Jimmy Bralower
Fred Vannucci Braz
Thomas Breheny
Ruth Brown
Juan Bryan
Peter Budd
Dan Burks
Jerald Burns
Kim Karston Bush
Jeff Butcher
Janice Byrd
Jimmy Campbell
Paul Candrilli
Andy Carabetta
Patty Carey
Chuchawan Chairimwiang
Wikanda Chaiviriyachok
Alice Chan
William Chang Suk-ping
William Chang Suk-ping
William Chang Suk-ping
William Chang Suk-ping
Gilles Ciment
Drew Clarke
Wendy Cohen
Kenneth Cole
Juliette Commagere
Reginald Connelly
Michael Coo
Joachim Cooder
Ry Cooder
Ry Cooder
Victor Cook
H. H. Cooper
J. John Corbett
Jack B Cornelius
Mei Lai Hippisley Coxe
Christopher Crowther
Arthur B Crutcher
Chad R Davis
Robert Dehn
Eric Delacour
Jennifer Delia
Joseph M Deluca
Philip Derise
Rich Devine
Sannucha Dhisayabutr
Ryan Donahue
Liza Donatelli
Lisa A Doyle
Nell Drake
Kelly Dugan
Guy Efrat
Massoumeh Emami
Gene Engels
Gene Engels
Gene Engels
Duane Estill
Ho Ka Fai
Craig Fehrman
Gennadiy Feldman
Michael Ferdie
Veronica Ferre
Kristi Frankenheimer-davis
Max Frankston
Scott Friedland
Manuel Galban
Johnny Gale
Tim Gallin
Jason Gaya
Travis Gerdes
Judah Getz
Donald Ghio
Shelly Gillette
Jeanne L Gilliland
Jackie Glisson
Sharon Globerson
Audra Gorman
Roy Grace
Elizabeth Greenberg
Ernesto Grenez
Brian Griggs
Daniel K Grosso
Darius Guerrero
Sandra Handloser
Lee Harper
Daniel Hawking
Christian Hawkins
Susan Hegarty
Narathorn Hemratanathorn
Belford Hendricks
Mitch Herron
Scott Hinkley
Sharon Chung Hiu Yeung
Jamie Ho
V. Nalla Black Houston
Amanda Hudson
Debora Y L Huen
Lukas Huffman
Sam Hutchins
Kyle D. Hutson
Syndey Huynh
Ben Jackson
Anthony Jacobs
Pensuda Jaroonrattanakul
Sandy Jo Johnston
Guadalupe Jolicoeur
Cary Jones
Norah Jones
Norah Jones
Johnny Joye
Piyanut Kaeomanee
Kritsada Kaewamani
Sithwat Kaewkutsri
Richard S Kamin
Wong Kar Wai
Wong Kar Wai
Wong Kar Wai
Avy Kaufman
Nicholas Kaye
Darius Khondji
Darius Khondji
Tyler Kim
Sean King
Mark Klein
Benjamin-lew Klon
Eric Knight
Robert Ellison Knight
Stephane Kooshmanian
Stephane Kooshmanian
Pete Kreinbihl
Ron Kummert
Drew Kunin
Edward Lacobelli Sr
Harold C Lacy
Daniel Lam
Daniel Lam
Amos Lee
Amos Lee
Rachel J Leek
Chutima Lertpattaraworachat
Claude Letessier
Gary Leung
Eric Lewin
Mitch Lillian
Smith Long
Jenny Lovin
Michael Lyon
Mandy Lyons
Thomas Machan
Christian Macklam
Steve Macklam
James Mahr
Wallace Man
Luis R Marroquin
David Ray Martin
Mike Martin
Tim Martin
Tyler Mauney
Max Maxwell
Francis J Mcbride
Cecil Mcclain
Jeremy Mcclain
Walter Mcclain
Clement Mcintosh
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
My Blueberry Nights - Norah Jones & Jude Law Star in Wong Kar-Wai's MY BLUEBERRY NIGHTS on DVD
It starts with pop star turned movie icon of unfulfillment Norah Jones, crashing into a diner run by Jude Law's transplanted Englishman, Jeremy -- counterman, night manager, waiter, cashier and short order specialist. He doesn't know quite what to whip up to ease Jones's heartbreak as Elizabeth, whose love affair with a neighborhood guy has thudded to an end. Hurt, angry, stymied, she shows up night after night, unable to keep from staring into the window of his upper story apartment across the street, asking the aproned bloke if her lover has been in lately. Always the answer is no. Finally, she leaves the key to his apartment, whereupon the obliging Jeremy drops it into a fishbowl full of other keys awaiting claimants. There may or may not be a million stories in The Naked City, but there are lots of keys in that fishbowl overflowing with connections broken or not made. It is only then that we notice the restaurant's name, painted in Cyrillic letters on the window, is (forgive the English transliteration) Klyootch the Russian word for key.
Law's simpatico Jeremy offers her the pick of the menu, including its array of pies. Cherry and apple always sell, he says, but, in a cityscape of loneliness, nobody ever goes for the blueberry (metaphor alert!). He himself favors lemon meringue, which he eats with a soupspoon from its tin pie plate. She's not interested in food, though. Or the riot of neon lighting that sometimes makes the film seem to be photographed through Popsicles. Or the heavily inscribed window, with its painted-on decorations and recommended house specialties, that sometimes makes it difficult to see the actors when the camera remains outside, filming in. She's too bummed. Either not noticing, or unable to respond to his obviously more than casually friendly interest, she splits. But she doesn't wipe him entirely off her screen. She sends him postcards from the road, and from the two places she stops at Memphis, Tennessee, and the arid gambling-covered sands between Ely, Nevada, and Las Vegas. Each time he gets a card, he tries to reach her by phone, but can't connect.
For a pop singer, Jones is surprisingly affectless, perhaps not inappropriate in an emotionally bruised character, perhaps explaining why she attracts other hurting souls along her way. In Memphis, her pain vibes attract David Straithairn's numbed-out cop, running up a three-figure tab at the bar she tends. He's trying to blur this pain stabbing him since the walkout of his wife (Rachel Weisz), who felt he was smothering her with the possessiveness that went hand-in-hand with his obsessive love. At the same time, he's locked into denial, desperately clinging to the belief that she'll come back to him. As she reiterates when she confrontationally re-injects herself into his bar time, this isn't going to happen. Sadistically, she flaunts the new young buck she's going with, to say nothing of the muscle car he drives. Or maybe it's just her own desperate need to make clear to him that she has really cut loose. Weisz's volatile character, straight from Tennessee Williams country, is a loose cannon. He's a ticking bomb. You know it'll end in tears, that both will in some way bounce off Elizabeth, who's taking it all in.
Until she skedaddles for Nevada. There, accosted by Natalie Portman's professional gambler, she stakes the latter with her savings stash after the cards fall badly on one high-stakes night. Of course, the card table isn't the only high-stakes arena in the gambling lady's life. After she hooks up with Elizabeth, and they become partners, with Elizabeth gambling that she'll get her savings back, it becomes apparent on the desert road to Las Vegas that some open-heart surgery, emotionally speaking, is in the cards for Portman's cowgirl. Paradoxically, although she encounters the ache of unreciprocated love wherever she goes, time seems to have a healing effect on Elizabeth's blues. Maybe it's Ry Cooder's music. The guy never writes stuff to which you don't respond.
Wong has described what for him was the pleasure of trying an American road movie. Certainly, it covers a lot of miles on the map, but the distance is more emotional and internal than geographical. All the more so after we glimpse Straithairn's cop eating his heart out on his bar stool and realize he's a sort of emotional reiteration of Law's counterman desperately trying to fan each postcard from Elizabeth into a small emotional flame. There's no escaping the conclusion that the wispiness of the story makes Wong's latest study in romantic yearning a minor film in a minor key. But it's spiced by the fact that he subverts at least one cliché of the road movie by making the women the ones traveling down their respective roads while the guys sit around immobilized, hoping they'll return. And, gender reversal aside, you want to kick your shoes off and run barefoot through the film's luxuriant textures. Pain has never looked more lush.
For more information about My Blueberry Nights, visit The Weinstein Company. To order My Blueberry Nights, go to TCM Shopping.
by Jay Carr
My Blueberry Nights - Norah Jones & Jude Law Star in Wong Kar-Wai's MY BLUEBERRY NIGHTS on DVD
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Spring April 4, 2008
Released in United States on Video July 1, 2008
Based on a Hong Kong short film written and directed by Wong Kar-Wai.
First English-language feature directed by Wong Kar-waii.
Released in United States Spring April 4, 2008 (NY)
Released in United States on Video July 1, 2008