Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe impossible love story between a preacher and a beautiful woman.The impossible love story between a preacher and a beautiful woman.The impossible love story between a preacher and a beautiful woman.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
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Johnny 316 (1998), written and directed by Erick Ifergan, is a haunting, poetic, and obscure indie film that blends religious allegory, urban loneliness, and unfulfilled longing into a moody cinematic experience. It's a modern reimagining of John the Baptist, set not in the desert - but on the empty, sun-bleached streets of Hollywood Boulevard.
Vincent Gallo plays Johnny, a mysterious, wandering street preacher who delivers fire-and-brimstone scripture to strangers under the hot L. A. sun. Clutching his Bible and murmuring verses, Johnny seems like a ghost out of time - a prophet without followers, a man clinging to divine purpose in a city obsessed with image and pleasure. His days blur into each other until he meets Sally (Nina Brosh), a rootless, melancholic woman who's equally adrift. Their silent connection forms the heart of the film - not quite love, not quite salvation, but something aching and intangible.
The film is largely plotless - more like a visual tone poem than a traditional narrative. It's filled with long, meditative shots, poetic monologues, and a stark, almost spiritual emptiness. The L. A. streets are shot with both grime and grace, capturing the emptiness beneath the glamour
Vincent Gallo's performance is quietly mesmerizing - intense, restrained, and deeply sad. His Johnny is a man preaching to a world that has long stopped listening. Nina Brosh brings an ethereal fragility to Sally, a woman who might be seeking salvation or simply human connection.
Johnny 316 isn't about plot - it's about mood, about spiritual dislocation in a modern world. It's slow, cryptic, and definitely not for mainstream tastes. But for those who are drawn to dreamlike cinema, it's a raw, spiritual lament on love, loss, and the failure of redemption in a godless city.
A forgotten, desert hymn echoing down a boulevard of lost souls.
Vincent Gallo plays Johnny, a mysterious, wandering street preacher who delivers fire-and-brimstone scripture to strangers under the hot L. A. sun. Clutching his Bible and murmuring verses, Johnny seems like a ghost out of time - a prophet without followers, a man clinging to divine purpose in a city obsessed with image and pleasure. His days blur into each other until he meets Sally (Nina Brosh), a rootless, melancholic woman who's equally adrift. Their silent connection forms the heart of the film - not quite love, not quite salvation, but something aching and intangible.
The film is largely plotless - more like a visual tone poem than a traditional narrative. It's filled with long, meditative shots, poetic monologues, and a stark, almost spiritual emptiness. The L. A. streets are shot with both grime and grace, capturing the emptiness beneath the glamour
Vincent Gallo's performance is quietly mesmerizing - intense, restrained, and deeply sad. His Johnny is a man preaching to a world that has long stopped listening. Nina Brosh brings an ethereal fragility to Sally, a woman who might be seeking salvation or simply human connection.
Johnny 316 isn't about plot - it's about mood, about spiritual dislocation in a modern world. It's slow, cryptic, and definitely not for mainstream tastes. But for those who are drawn to dreamlike cinema, it's a raw, spiritual lament on love, loss, and the failure of redemption in a godless city.
A forgotten, desert hymn echoing down a boulevard of lost souls.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDirector Erick Ifergan reworked this movie and shot some completion scenes to finish it up in 2006.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Hollywood Salome
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 17min(77 min)
- Couleur
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