IMDb RATING
7.3/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Lily and Jim are interviewed about their disastrous blind date.Lily and Jim are interviewed about their disastrous blind date.Lily and Jim are interviewed about their disastrous blind date.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 22 wins & 4 nominations total
Robert May
- Jim
- (voice)
- (as Rob May)
Karin Anger
- Lily
- (voice)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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This short was in part four of the "Short Cinema Journal"--a film I rented from Netflix but which appears to have originally been a monthly film series for people who like mediocre modern short films AND love to have the DVD chock full of commercials. I have so far tried two of the Journal's DVDs and felt enraged at the horrible way that a viewer needs to navigate the disk in order to see the films. Talk about an over-produced and overly complicated way of doing this! While I have and will continue to see as many shorts as I can, I really doubt if I'll bother with the Journals because of these factors.
LILY AND JIM was probably my favorite film in the set, though it was rather slow going at first. It begins with two terribly animated and nerdy characters talking about going on a blind date. The artwork reminded me of Don Hertzfeldt's but I didn't know for sure until later that it was indeed his work. I knew for sure when the couple turned on the television--the art and especially the very sick (and funny) minute or so the set was on was the highlight of the film. Apart from this, the film is quite cute and it was very insightful into the hazards of dating--especially for folks who aren't as charming or clever as folks on TV (in other words, most of us!).
LILY AND JIM was probably my favorite film in the set, though it was rather slow going at first. It begins with two terribly animated and nerdy characters talking about going on a blind date. The artwork reminded me of Don Hertzfeldt's but I didn't know for sure until later that it was indeed his work. I knew for sure when the couple turned on the television--the art and especially the very sick (and funny) minute or so the set was on was the highlight of the film. Apart from this, the film is quite cute and it was very insightful into the hazards of dating--especially for folks who aren't as charming or clever as folks on TV (in other words, most of us!).
10JBC-2
I have recently seen this hilarious short film with the family on DVD and everyone was in 'stitches' The DVD has a number of great short films and is called "SHORT Issue 4 : Seduction" I love short films and this must go into my top 10.
I saw this short as a part of the Spike and Mike Festival of Animation and it *completely* stole the show. Basically it's about two people -- who are obviously perfect for one another -- on the ultimate Blind Date from Hell, where things rapidly go from awkward to horrible to worse. I wish I dared to write down some of the absolutely hysterical dialogue, but that would be spoiling the fun for others. This is a brilliant, very twisted gem of a short film, and made me an instant fan of Don Hertzfeldt, the animator. See it and you'll become one too.
Although clearly a reference to Woody Allen (and more precisely "Annie Hall"), this fantastic short film reminds me very much of Todd Solondz's "Happiness" (though it was made earlier), in the way that *incredibly* awkward and uncomfortable situations are drawn out and out, and the scenes never allowed to end gracefully to save the characters from their shame and misery, but instead go on and on and keep getting worse. Sometimes it's almost unbearable to watch! (Which is even more credit to Hertzfeldt and the voice actors, since we are only watching the artist's trademark stick figures!). I laughed my head off with this gem. Hertzfeldt never lets me down, he's a genius!!
Put two dreadfully shy people (throw in low self-esteem) on a blind date and you have this great little animated feature. Each of the figures is trying to dredge up something to say and be honest at the same time. The problem is that something one says triggers a strange response. Nerves abound and they try, but can't connect. The girl makes a comment about her parents being incinerated. Do you think that could lead to a question or a comment? He doesn't even ask how that happened. This is a tightly produced little film that we all can relate to, even if it makes us crawl.
Did you know
- GoofsJim's water glass disappears briefly.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Love: The Movie (2004)
Details
- Runtime13 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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