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Permanent Vacation

  • 1980
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 15m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Chris Parker in Permanent Vacation (1980)
A young man wanders New York City searching for some meaning in life and encounters many idiosyncratic characters.
Play trailer2:05
2 Videos
29 Photos
ComedyDrama

A young man wanders New York City searching for some meaning in life and encounters many idiosyncratic characters.A young man wanders New York City searching for some meaning in life and encounters many idiosyncratic characters.A young man wanders New York City searching for some meaning in life and encounters many idiosyncratic characters.

  • Director
    • Jim Jarmusch
  • Writer
    • Jim Jarmusch
  • Stars
    • Chris Parker
    • Leila Gastil
    • John Lurie
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Writer
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Stars
      • Chris Parker
      • Leila Gastil
      • John Lurie
    • 27User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
    • 69Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Trailer
    Bill Murray vs. Zombies? We're Dying for 'The Dead Don't Die'
    Clip 3:12
    Bill Murray vs. Zombies? We're Dying for 'The Dead Don't Die'
    Bill Murray vs. Zombies? We're Dying for 'The Dead Don't Die'
    Clip 3:12
    Bill Murray vs. Zombies? We're Dying for 'The Dead Don't Die'

    Photos29

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    Top cast16

    Edit
    Chris Parker
    Chris Parker
    • Allie
    Leila Gastil
    • Leila
    John Lurie
    John Lurie
    • Sax Player
    Richard Boes
    Richard Boes
    • War Vet
    Sara Driver
    Sara Driver
    • Nurse
    Charlie Spademan
    • Patient
    Jane Fire
    • Nurse
    Ruth Bolton
    • Mother
    Evelyn Smith
    • Patient
    María Duval
    • Latin Girl
    • (as Maria Duval)
    Lisa Rosen
    • Popcorn Girl
    Frankie Faison
    Frankie Faison
    • Man in Lobby
    Suzanne Fletcher
    • Girl in Car
    Felice Rosser
    Felice Rosser
    • Woman by Mailbox
    Eric Mitchell
    • Car Fence
    Chris Hameon
    • French Traveller
    • Director
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • Writer
      • Jim Jarmusch
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    6.111.3K
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    Featured reviews

    5121212

    Original debut

    This film which is, as far as I know, the first one by Jarmusch, when he still studied to become a film director, is original in its way to reinstall 'realism' – somebody would say 'surrealism' – into film art. He tries to make us understand a special psychological type of our time, a 'tourist in life' on 'permanent vacation'. People having decided to follow that life strategy don't engage themselves in anything or anyone. They just do what they 'feel like', not caring about what that means to others. Others are not really human. They are looked upon as a tourist might look upon an exotic and alien tribe.

    However, they themselves also feel alienated and estranged, indeed. Why engage in anything? The home where I was born was bombed out 'by the Chinese', my mother is crazy, my father is dead, and there is no hope for the future.

    Jarmusch is convincing in his description of this psychological type which might be typical of our time. It might be a descripton of himself. But that is not what makes the film original. It is rather the way he succeeds in making that description.

    Already in this film he uses stationary cameras with horizontal, and sometimes vertical, views, and depicts the world, as exemplified by New York City, as ugly as it is to all of us, if we do not embellish it.

    What Jarmusch has to tell might be banal to some but it is certainly something that exists and is quite difficult to make understandable to us. Exactly like the opinion of the main character. But I think he has been successful in mediating such an understanding to us who have chosen a different life strategy.
    7virtualimmigrant

    If I were you, I'd take a permanent vacation

    Leave it to Jim Jarmusch to create haunting and elusive visual stories with static camera and sparse dialogue. 'Permanent Vacation' is no masterpiece and stands far from Jarmusch's greatest movies, but it clearly has the magic touch that makes the film live, and it doesn't feel boring.

    Jim Jarmusch made the film right after he dropped out of film school, and it is clear that he already had his unique vision and way of telling stories. The story follows slacker Allie (Chris Parker) on his quest to find the meaning of life. The film is seemingly plotless, without proper beginning and ending, not to mention the conclusion, but it has nice flow that ties all the quirky characters and pretentious philosophical conversations into whole.

    'Permanent Vacation' is very important to see if you are interested where Jim Jarmusch come from (and also Richard Linklater as 'Permanent Vacation' was major influence to his own 'Slacker').
    6Karl Self

    Permanent ennui

    Let's not put too much lipstick on this pig. Permanent Vacation ... cool title, memorable lead, nice style and all that, but ultimately an often boring movie. The only thing that keeps this above the water is the simple fact that director Jim Jarmusch followed it up with some of the best movies of all time. So it's cool to see him blunder his way through his first oeuvre.

    The fact that our hero Allie is disenfranchised because his mother is in a mental institution might constitute the oldest plot device in the book. There is really no development, no suspense, nothing intriguing. Jarmusch commits the classic mistake of every first-time filmmaker; he has yet to learn that it's not enough to put a crass character before the camera. You have to make the viewer care about him. And unfortunately you can't do that by boring the crap out of the viewer. Allie is a high-strung, messed-up kid who could franchise disenfranchisement if only he could be bothered. He has a girlfriend that should rightfully be mine, who gets a kick out of dating a pretentious freeloader with a croaky voice. He meets a bunch of strange people, nicks a car, then gets the feck out on a boat. Cue amazing end sequence shot on a boat going away from Manhattan but looking back at it.

    Check it out if you're a spotty movie boffin with no social life.

    Give it a miss if you're more into Hannah Montana.
    6framptonhollis

    fascinating and funny in parts, but severely flawed as a whole

    Since this is considered a student film, I must admit that I cannot come up with a better reason to fall asleep during class.

    "Permanent Vacation" is the darkly comic debut of acclaimed indie filmmaker Jim Jarmusch, and is unfortunately a somewhat boring film. It had plenty of things going for it, an unsettling and hypnotic musical score, a wild sense of dark humor, an interesting cast of side characters, and a beautiful visual style. However, Jarmusch sadly decided to craft this film's final product into a seemingly incomplete, ridiculously slow paced ride that is scattered with moments of genius throughout. There is plenty I liked about this movie, but it was just so TEDIOUS and DULL-this is a 70 minute long movie that really should have only been a 40 minute long movie. The main character is annoying and pretentious, a lot of the dialogue is cringe inducing (while some of it is actually pretty amazing), and by the end I just wanted to take a nap. This could have easily been a great film if Jarmusch decided to work a little bit more on crafting a main character that is at least somewhat bearable (he doesn't have to be likable, but please don't make him boring and obnoxious!), and made it less goddamn SLOW! I am all for slow movies ("Satantango" is one of my absolute favorite films), and there are a few scenes in this film that are excruciatingly slow paced but manage to work due to the slowness adding to the emotional depth and black humor of those scenes. However, a vast majority of the excruciatingly slow sequences in this film just made me want to beat my head against a brick wall so I could be entertained for once!

    This isn't a bad film at all, and I would recommend it to some degree for anyone whose interested, but I would still have to recommend it with caution because it is so, so very flawed and at times unbearably boring. But, at the very least there is a lot of great humor, visual flare, quirky side characters, and beautifully discomforting background music.

    Luckily, Jarmusch would improve his ways and skills by the time he made his follow up, break out feature "Stranger Than Paradise", which is not only one of the funniest movies of all time, but also one of my absolute FAVORITES!
    7christopher-underwood

    Assured first film

    Assured first film from Jarmusch is pretty tough viewing to begin with. Slow moving or not moving at all and ponderous, seeming inconsequential dialogue but then somewhere along the line we find ourselves captivated. Beautifully shot with ugly/beautiful still shots of back streets of New York. Apart from a scene showing the lead guy spray painting a sub title for the film and thereby seeming to plant the film within the late 70s or 80s, the rest of the 'action' gives more the impression of taking place in the late 60s/early 70s. It may well be that Jarmusch has not set the film in the past but that his cinematic influences are from that period. In any event this is well worth a watch and as with all the man's films there is a fiercely compassionate element. Even when the characters appear completely unappealing, we are somehow encouraged to feel some degree of empathy.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Jean Michel Basquiat was present while they were shooting the scenes in the apartment, sleeping on the floor in a sleeping bag.
    • Goofs
      The position of Leila's legs on the radiator changes between shots as she talks to Allie.
    • Quotes

      Allie: Some people, you know, they - they can distract themselves with ambitions and motivation to work, you know, but not me... They think people like myself are crazy, you know. Everyone does because of the way I live, you know.

    • Connections
      Featured in La valse des pantins (1982)
    • Soundtracks
      Up There in Orbit
      Written and Performed by Earl Bostic

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Permanent Vacation?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 25, 1984 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • The Match Factory (Germany)
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Dauernd Ferien
    • Filming locations
      • Roosevelt Island, New York, USA(Bombed house where Allie was born)
    • Production company
      • Cinesthesia Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $12,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 15 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Chris Parker in Permanent Vacation (1980)
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