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7 Chinese Brothers

  • 2015
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 16min
NOTE IMDb
5,6/10
1,7 k
MA NOTE
Jason Schwartzman in 7 Chinese Brothers (2015)
Sharing a small apartment with his sleepy French bulldog, an unmotivated thirty-something slacker lands a job at a Quick Lube to be close to the shop's beautiful manager. Has he found a new purpose in life? Is there still hope?
Lire trailer1:58
8 Videos
18 photos
Comédie

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueSharing a small apartment with his sleepy French bulldog, an unmotivated thirty-something slacker lands a job at a Quick Lube to be close to the shop's beautiful manager. Has he found a new ... Tout lireSharing a small apartment with his sleepy French bulldog, an unmotivated thirty-something slacker lands a job at a Quick Lube to be close to the shop's beautiful manager. Has he found a new purpose in life? Is there still hope?Sharing a small apartment with his sleepy French bulldog, an unmotivated thirty-something slacker lands a job at a Quick Lube to be close to the shop's beautiful manager. Has he found a new purpose in life? Is there still hope?

  • Réalisation
    • Bob Byington
  • Scénario
    • Bob Byington
  • Casting principal
    • Jason Schwartzman
    • Olympia Dukakis
    • Tunde Adebimpe
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,6/10
    1,7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Bob Byington
    • Scénario
      • Bob Byington
    • Casting principal
      • Jason Schwartzman
      • Olympia Dukakis
      • Tunde Adebimpe
    • 23avis d'utilisateurs
    • 30avis des critiques
    • 56Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 2 victoires et 4 nominations au total

    Vidéos8

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    Official Trailer
    7 Chinese Brothers: Clubbing
    Clip 2:03
    7 Chinese Brothers: Clubbing
    7 Chinese Brothers: Clubbing
    Clip 2:03
    7 Chinese Brothers: Clubbing
    7 Chinese Brothers: Are You Hiring?
    Clip 1:56
    7 Chinese Brothers: Are You Hiring?
    7 Chinese Brothers: 90 Percent Of The Equation Is Just Showing Up
    Clip 1:44
    7 Chinese Brothers: 90 Percent Of The Equation Is Just Showing Up
    7 Chinese Brothers: Jason And Arrow
    Clip 0:30
    7 Chinese Brothers: Jason And Arrow
    7 Chinese Brothers: Jason And Olympia
    Clip 1:18
    7 Chinese Brothers: Jason And Olympia

    Photos17

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 11
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    Rôles principaux44

    Modifier
    Jason Schwartzman
    Jason Schwartzman
    • Larry
    Olympia Dukakis
    Olympia Dukakis
    • Grandma
    Tunde Adebimpe
    Tunde Adebimpe
    • Major Norwood
    Eleanore Pienta
    Eleanore Pienta
    • Lupe
    Stephen Root
    Stephen Root
    • George
    Arrow Schwartzman
    Arrow Schwartzman
    • Arrow the Dog
    Jimmy Gonzales
    Jimmy Gonzales
    • Jimmy
    John Gatins
    John Gatins
    • Dinsmore
    Jonathan Togo
    Jonathan Togo
    • Don
    Josh Meyer
    Josh Meyer
    • Reginald
    Ted Beck
    • Cashier
    Chris Doubek
    Chris Doubek
    • Daryl
    Grover Coulson
    Grover Coulson
    • Mr. Johnson
    Alex Karpovsky
    Alex Karpovsky
    • Kaminsky
    Jennifer Prediger
    Jennifer Prediger
    • Woman with glasses
    Charlie LaRose
    Charlie LaRose
    • Woman's Friend
    Anna Margaret Hollyman
    Anna Margaret Hollyman
    • Angry Audrey
    Michael Tully
    Michael Tully
    • Religious Man
    • Réalisation
      • Bob Byington
    • Scénario
      • Bob Byington
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs23

    5,61.6K
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    Avis à la une

    3planktonrules

    I kept waiting and waiting and waiting for something to happen....

    Sometimes you watch a film and wonder to yourself 'what were they thinking when they made this movie?!'--such was my reaction when I watched this new and oddly named film starring Jason Schwartzman. Bob Byington wrote and directed this strange movie and it's one that left me confused and bored.

    When the film begins, Larry (Schwartzman) is a complete slacker and a bit of a loser. He's just lost a job because he was caught stealing and he doesn't seem to care in the least. What he does care about are drinking, taking drugs and his dog (incidentally, this French Bulldog is actually Schwartzman's dog in real life). Later, when he gets a job in a quick lube store, you keep expecting Larry to somehow show that down deep he's capable of change and will become responsible and likable...which never really happens in any meaningful way. He is, throughout the entire film, a jerk who has serious issues and who doesn't seem to care about this nor does he see much of a need to change. There is a tiny change at the end...but clearly not enough to offer any real hope for the guy cleaning himself up and achieving something with his life.

    This film is quirky...almost in a Wes Anderson sort of way, which is what I expected since Schwartzman frequently appears in Anderson's films. However, the quirkiness isn't humorous...just quirky and the film never really resonates with the audience. It's strange...just to be strange. And this soon becomes tedious. Had this been a short film, it might have been an interesting character study. But at 90 minutes and with a leading character you cannot help but dislike the film dragged. No sense of reason for all this seemed evident to me at any point. A clear misfire and I can see why this film went to straight to DVD very quickly. If you care, it's out this week but I wouldn't rush to see it unless you are a die-hard Schwartzman fan or you like long and ponderous films.
    4FloodClearwater

    Larry Sings Liner Notes

    This film is a case study on why film criticism exists, to separate the chaff of it from the wheat it pretends as.

    Neither an evolution nor simulcrum of Lost in Translation, Office Space, or Bottle Rocket, this extended screen test of Jason Schwartzman inhabiting deep suburban environs as a narcissist layabout was likely pitched to distributors as a mashup of all three.

    Writer-director Bob Byington begins with an old R.E.M. song, 7 Chinese Brothers. This song, from the band's Reckoning album, was naught but a prank; it was Michael Stipe singing the liner notes to a random gospel LP he'd found laying around, which the studio engineer mistakenly recorded, and which the band, finding the track's accidental provenance hilarious, formed into a nondescript, mildly jangly tune.

    Does this near non-song by R.E.M. inform Byington's film in any measure? No, except that he cues the song at the end credits so that the key grips might have a mildly jangly ruffle and flourish behind their accrediture.

    From the song Byington derives the title, and upon the meaningless title Byington builds no story whatsoever, and by no story I mean not even a Seinfeldian non-story proposition.

    Jason Schwartzman is the lead as "Larry." Schwartzman, who is a celebrity and a very good actor, and who might perpetually attract some long-tail audience interested in watching him do anything--say, selling peanuts in a ballpark vendor's uniform-- for a duration of 76 minutes, is required by Byington to move in and out of bland sets (a quik lube garage, a dingy convenience store) and make slight actions (throw a hat at a Mazda, deny your grandmother a sip from a Big Gulp) that are supposed to stand in for the plot or un- plot as it were. Nothing worth filming, nothing that would be worth filming by students, is there.

    These are petty crimes against cinema Byington is caught at, but that should be no taint against Schwartzman, who screen tests as plumly as ever, or indeed against Tunde Adebimpe or Eleanor Pienta, who check in as friendly companions who join us in wondering just what is supposed to be fascinating about a character who is simultaneously so self-possessed and so lacking in initiative of thought, credible emotion, or stirrings.

    Rather than screening this movie, Schwartzman enthusiasts are better off hunting down Hotel Chevalier and spending the time gained from unspent viewing balancing their checkbooks.
    4Seth_Rogue_One

    Maybe 'Plotless' would have been a better name for the movie

    Cause it really doesn't have much of a plot, and the little that resembles a plot doesn't seem to make a ton of sense.

    It's basically about a self-absorbed 'loser' who played by someone else other than Jason Swartzman would probably be tedious.

    But Jason's natural charm and charisma redeems the character somewhat from feeling like a total prick and the 'movie' from being a total trainwreck.

    I write movie as 'movie' because it really doesn't feel like a movie, it feels like maybe it would have worked better as a TV series split up to 3 parts instead (although I'm not sure that people would tune in every week to see the next episode).

    There are some okay scenes, mainly the ones between Jason and his (also real life pet) dog, they have better chemistry together than Jason has with any of his human co-stars in the movie.

    So I would only remotely recommend this to hardcore Jason fans who has to see everything he's in, if you're not too fussy about him give it a skip, if you dislike him then well you will without a doubt hate it.
    7tinybirds

    If you love Jason Schwartzman...

    Jason Schwartzman is one of those actors whose films you generally either love or maybe kind of hate. 7 Chinese Brothers (2015) is a film that is definitely no exception, but for those of us who are fans, it hits the mark head on. The film is a character study of Larry, a 30- something slacker and all around aimless weirdo ambling through his days trying to keep himself amused. The brainchild of director Bob Byington, this strange character loses his job at a restaurant after being caught stealing booze from the bar into his big gulp, only to find himself at war with the restaurant manager in an absurd ongoing battle that amusingly recurs throughout the film. Larry spends the bulk of his time discussing life with his lethargic boston terrier Arrow, Schwartzman's real-life dog and real-deal star of the show. Arrow is hilariously nonplussed and adorably immortalized in this film - his sedate screen presence as well as the evident bond between him and his owner contributes immeasurably to the tone of the film and the character, as well as its overall charm.

    This film is low on actual plot lines, but there are a number of other characters with whom Larry interacts during his day to day. His best friend Major, played by TV On The Radio frontman Babatunde Adebimpe, helps to ground the antics of our main character, but his lucky life also serves to make stark the unlucky fortune of the far more everyday and unremarkable Larry. Olympia Dukakis is flawless as Larry's grandmother and voice of reason, with whom his self-concerned attitude makes itself evident early in the film. So while little of note actually happens throughout the film, we have ample opportunity to explore the recesses of this odd character's mind as well as watch his gradual arch towards some personal growth. The film's camera-work is primarily that shaky, hand-held feel that's currently relentlessly popular in this style of film. Byington really makes viewers feel as though they're following Larry around and watching him mess up, be erratic, and embarrass himself real-time. The camera is right in Schwartzman's face through the majority of the film so his acting had to be spot on to carry this film, and he succeeds in being both comically on-point and pointedly Larry at all times. The character never slips once while the audience eats up all of his bizarre habits, like imitating a fat kid getting out of a pool on every possible countertop, as only Schwartzman delivers this signature kind of absurdity with his particular sort of grace.

    7 Chinese Brothers is strange, it's meandering, and it's even a little bit boring at times. It is possible that critics of Schwartzman could suggest that this sort of character exploration is just another means to show off and glorify that thing that he does, that quirky indie, alternative film thing for which Jason Schwartzman is sort of the posterboy. While we sat in the theater and the film came to a close, my partner even turned to me and just said "I don't get it, what is this movie about?" And that's the thing, it's not really about anything in particular. There's no genius, deep message in this storyline; while there's an element of wanting to connect and find a sort of joie de vivre here, these themes are dominated by just the sheer wandering into the character that dominates the screen time. Yet its richness can be found in the experience of watching an artist create a character that audiences simply want to watch. These are the sorts of ideas from which cult films spring, where there's just something that hooks you and reels you in about the world created by those involved in its production. This is what Jason Schwartzman is really good at and here Bob Byington has successfully crafted a memorable space that allowed him to do his thing delightfully. 7 Chinese Brothers is just right for those that found themselves psyched just on seeing its advertisement, and you know who you are. If you aren't one of those people, maybe you could just go to see Arrow in all his drowsy glory.
    7StevePulaski

    Less a film, more a thought that surprisingly works

    Bob Byington's 7 Chinese Brothers is less a film and more an idea, a thought, or even a potential TV show pilot. At seventy-one minutes in length, it's a film that practically questions what can be done with a film that has no cogent plot and relies on one simple, yet complex, character and his circumstances, most of which caused by his obnoxious attitude or his general indifference. On that basis alone, the film shouldn't be half as successful as it is, but through its feet-dragging narrative, practically impulsive structure, and low stakes, I did admittedly enjoy this film.

    This film isn't laugh out loud funny, nor is it particularly compelling or insightful. It gives us Larry (Jason Schwartzman), a man evidently in his early thirties, living alone with his bulldog, who gets fired from his restaurant job minutes into the film for sneaking drinks at the bar. He wanders over to Quick Lube for an oil change, asks the cute manager girl for an application, and soon enough, he's working for an incorrigible man named Jimmy (Jimmy Gonzales), who encourages him to steal any spare change out of customers' vehicles. On top of all that, he's constantly going back and forth to the nursing home to visit his grandmother (Olympia Dukakis), who remains his last living relative, in addition to seeing his friend Major Norwood (Tunde Adebimpe).

    Larry is the kind of character only Jason Schwartzman could play to great effect, for he conveys multiple different feelings with nearly every line or facial expression he conjures up. Larry is also the kind of character that acts like he has everything under control and that his cleverness and falsified feelings of self-worth will carry him to the places he needs to be. The problem is Larry really isn't half as good as he thinks he is, and this results for a lot of awkward scenarios thanks to Larry's random jokes/physical comedy and a multitude of impulsive, inappropriate actions that have consequences on his part.

    Schwartzman has to carry a lion's weight of Byington's film on his back, and with that, succeeds because without a dynamic screen presence, 7 Chinese Brothers could've fallen apart in its first few minutes. But because Byington keeps the film moving, through fluid scenes that reflect humor and believable, albeit rather light, drama and never stalls into romantic or comedic clichés, the film, in turn, keeps moving and assembling a fun and breezy personality.

    I have no idea what relevance the title has towards the story, nor can I figure out the takeaway from this film other than life can pass you by if you think you're funnier and more important than you actually are. However, through very little in the way narrative structure and flair and glamour, Byington has made 7 Chinese Brothers work almost solely on the charisma and dynamic talents of his leading actor, in addition to making this a largely fun, project. At the end of it all, I can admire that.

    Starring: Jason Schwartzman, Olympia Dukakis, Tunde Adebimpe, and Jimmy Gonzales. Directed by: Bob Byington.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The lead dog in the film is actor Jason Scwartzman's real dog Arrow.
    • Citations

      Grandma: 90 percent of the equation is just showing up.

    • Connexions
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: Jason Schwartzman/Tatiana Maslany/Dan White (2015)
    • Bandes originales
      Since You're Gone
      Written by Ric Ocasek

      Performed by The Cars

      Published by Universal Music Publishing Group

      Courtesy of Elektra Entertainment Group

      By arrangement with Warner Music Group Film & TV Licensing

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    FAQ18

    • How long is 7 Chinese Brothers?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 13 avril 2016 (Australie)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
      • Grèce
    • Site officiel
      • Official Facebook
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Seven Chinese Brothers
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Crestview Minimax IGA, 7108 Woodrow Ave., Austin, Texas, États-Unis(Grocery Store)
    • Sociétés de production
      • 8750 Films
      • Faliro House Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 28 180 $US
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 28 180 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 16min(76 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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