Nowhere | |
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Directed by | Gregg Araki |
Written by | Gregg Araki |
Produced by | Gregg Araki Andrea Sperling |
Starring |
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Cinematography | Arturo Smith |
Edited by | Gregg Araki |
Distributed by | Fine Line Features |
Release date |
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Running time | 78 minutes |
Countries | United States France |
Language | English |
Box office | $194,201 [1] |
Nowhere is a 1997 American black comedy drama film written and directed by Gregg Araki. Described by Araki as " Beverly Hills 90210 on acid", the film follows a day in the lives of a group of Los Angeles college students and the strange lives that they lead. It stars an ensemble cast led by James Duval and Rachel True.
The film is Araki's sixth overall and third entry in his Teenage Apocalypse film trilogy, preceded by Totally F***ed Up (1993) and The Doom Generation (1995). Like the other films in the trilogy, it contains scenes of graphic violence and sexuality. The film notably includes several cast members on the verge of stardom, including Ryan Phillippe, Mena Suvari, Kathleen Robertson, and Denise Richards.
Initial reception was mixed, though in subsequent years it has garnered a cult status and its reputation among critics has grown.
Dark and Mel are a bisexual couple in an open relationship. Mel is dating a girl named Lucifer, whom Dark hates, while Dark is interested in a mysterious boy he keeps running into, named Montgomery. The three of them meet up at a café they frequent, where we are introduced to other teens they know, such as Alyssa, Dingbat and Egg and Dark's friend Cowboy, and they discuss a party being held that night by a man they know named Jujyfruit. Egg runs into an unnamed TV star from Baywatch (played by Baywatch actor Jaason Simmons).
Cowboy tells Dark about the heroin addiction his boyfriend Bart suffers with. He offers Bart the chance to fix their relationship if he stops using drugs, but he declines. Alyssa and Dingbat meet with Ducky, Egg's brother and Dingbat's crush, before Alyssa meets up with her boyfriend Elvis. While waiting at a bus stop, Dark sees three valley girls killed by an alien, which he tries to catch on video before it disappears.
At the Baywatch star's place, he and Egg watch TV together before he tries to make a move on her. She rejects his advances, and he violently rapes her. Dark and his friends play a drugged out game of kick the can, during which Montgomery gets abducted by the same alien from earlier, whom Dark runs into in a locker room. Egg and Bart both return home and watch the same televangelist, Moses Helper, on TV, who encourages the two to commit suicide in order to reach heaven.
When he fails to convince Mel to become monogamous at Jujyfruit's party, Dark goes outside and is joined by Dingbat. Suddenly Ducky, after hearing about his sister's suicide, leaps into a swimming pool, with Dingbat using CPR to resuscitate him. Going back into the party, Dark enters a kitchen where he sees the same alien from earlier. He meets with Handjob and begins to tell him about his day before Alyssa and Elvis arrive. Elvis claims Handjob sold him cut drugs and beats him to death with a can of tomato soup.
Dark returns home and records a diary entry on his video camera, saying how he's "totally doomed". As he attempts to sleep, Montgomery knocks on his window. Dark lets him in as he explains that he was abducted and experimented on by aliens who intend to invade Earth. The two lie down in bed together and Montgomery asks if he can spend the night, with Dark agreeing only if he promises to never leave. The two close their eyes but are disturbed, as Montgomery goes into a coughing fit, then explodes into a shower of blood, leaving only a cockroach-like alien who exclaims, "I'm outta here", before crawling out of the window. A blood-covered Dark turns to the audience, staring with his mouth wide open.
In a brief post-credits scene, Dark, still covered in Montgomery's blood, screams out in horror and anguish.
The film received mixed reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, it has a 47% approval rating based on 15 reviews, with an average score of 4.3/10. [2] The Los Angeles Times gave the film a positive review, calling it "high energy" and stating that "Araki is a marvel at controlling shifting tones, and Nowhere, a confident, intricate work, has a great pop art look, yet its emotions are real." [3] In an article on the upcoming summer films of 1997, The New York Times described Nowhere as "California's version of Kids ." [4]
Writing for Empire , Jake Hamilton gave the film a negative review, stating "True, there are some dazzling scenes; a brilliant intercutting sex-scene; death by a Campbell's soup tin and a ridiculously absurd finale, but compared to the likes of Richard Linklater's endearing Dazed and Confused , Nowhere is completely lost up its own arse." [5]
Araki himself described the film as " Beverly Hills, 90210 on acid". [6] In a retrospective article on the film in Nylon , Marie Lodi wrote, "Nowhere's surreal and hyper-saturated visuals were just as ahead of its time as its themes." [6]
In the US, it was released on VHS. [7] Elsewhere, it was made available on DVD in the United Kingdom, where it was released on a Region 2 DVD. [8] It was later re-released in the United Kingdom in 2013 featuring a commentary track with Gregg Araki James Duval, Rachel True and Jordan Ladd. [9] [10]
Strand Releasing announced plans to release a 4K restoration of Nowhere, including scenes not shown in the theatrical version for MPAA ratings purposes, in late 2023. [11] On September 16, 2023, the restoration debuted alongside The Doom Generation and Totally F***ed Up, Araki’s other films in his Teen Apocalypse trilogy, at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles. [11] [12] In 2024, The Criterion Collection announced it would release this restored version of the film as part of its Gregg Araki's Teen Apocalypse Trilogy set, due for a September 24 release that year. [13]
The soundtrack to the film, Nowhere: Music from the Gregg Araki Movie, was released on Mercury Records in 1997. [14]
Nowhere: Music from the Gregg Araki Movie | |
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Soundtrack album by Various artists | |
Released | 1997 |
Recorded | 1991–1997 |
Length | 64:05 |
Label | Mercury Records |
Songs featured in the movie that do not appear on the soundtrack album include:
In 2015, fashion house Kenzo commissioned a new short film from Gregg Araki that would feature the label's winter campaign. The short, titled Here Now, serves as a sequel to Nowhere and is set sometime soon after the film's events. [15]
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