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IMDbPro

Mule Skinner Blues

  • 2001
  • R
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
158
YOUR RATING
Mule Skinner Blues (2001)
Home Video Trailer from Sundance Channel
Play trailer1:31
1 Video
4 Photos
Documentary

A retired shrimper enlists the help of fellow colorful trailer park residents to make a B-grade horror film.A retired shrimper enlists the help of fellow colorful trailer park residents to make a B-grade horror film.A retired shrimper enlists the help of fellow colorful trailer park residents to make a B-grade horror film.

  • Director
    • Stephen Earnhart
  • Stars
    • Beanie Andrew
    • Don Arrup
    • Emily Brannen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    158
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stephen Earnhart
    • Stars
      • Beanie Andrew
      • Don Arrup
      • Emily Brannen
    • 10User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Mule Skinner Blues
    Trailer 1:31
    Mule Skinner Blues

    Photos3

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast30

    Edit
    Beanie Andrew
    • Self
    Don Arrup
    • Satan Worshipper
    Emily Brannen
    • Seductress
    • (as Emily Brannon)
    Holly Cavanaugh
    • Self
    Raymond Dagley
    • Self
    Matt Elefant
    • The Handsome Neck
    Salvatore Froio
    • Suave Vampire
    Lance Hallowell
    • Vampire Killer #2
    Heidi Horst
    • Biting Vampiress
    Miss Jeannie
    • Self
    Ray Lane
    • Self
    Roy Lane
    • Self
    Annabelle Lea Usher
    • Self
    Ricky Lix
    • Miss Jeannie's Doctor
    Gleb Mikhalev
    • Young Boy
    Amber Mizell
    • Nude Girl in Woods
    Irina Palkanian
    • Dying Vampiress
    Larry Parrot
    • Self
    • Director
      • Stephen Earnhart
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    6.6158
    1
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7bill-461

    Not Errol Morris good, but pretty darned good.

    Unlike a lot of people who reviewed this film and seem to think it's a crime to look at the lives of people who aren't doing all that well, I enjoyed Mule Skinner Blues and enjoyed these people. True, Beanie was a little annoying and his story got old quickly, but there are some no BS moments where we really get a contrast from the times that he is overly, "on." His description of falling into the depths of alcoholism is enough to scare you sober. Steve and Miss Jeannie are truly interesting characters and I loved "DUI Blues." I think that a bit more time could have been spent on exploring their artistry and a little bit less should have been spent on the making and premiere of Turnabout is Fairplay (sic).
    jmarco68

    a review from brooklyn college

    After viewing Mule Skinner Blues I came away realizing that it was not like many documentaries that I have seen before. I found it to be highly stylized and incorporated many elements from fiction films. Like fiction films it had an actual soundtrack. It wasn't the usual no frills soundtrack that one finds in a documentary film. The director used fantasy sequences to help us get inside the minds of the characters. There was one particular sequence when Steve Walker was describing Vietnam and the director spliced in footage of explosions and combat sounds to help paint a picture for the viewer. I liked the whole approach to the film and the idea in that it showed a slice of Americana that is not familiar to all of us. The movie shows a different slant on the American dream by showing that these people living in a trailer park have dreams and aspirations to become famous although their situation seems hopeless. The film also acts as a film about a community group. It shows how these former alcoholics and eccentrics band together as a community to help Beanie make his film. Another thing that contributed to my liking this film is the way the director kept the film somewhat fast-paced. He did not allow the editing to lag and become boring. He edited the sequences in such a way that it switched between characters, keeping your interest going and not staying on one character for too long. The director himself said "For me, the greatest sin a filmmaker can make is to create monotony, so it's my goal to make a documentary film that's every bit as thrilling, engaging, and visually stimulating as the fiction genre allows." I also think that the director did an important thing by allowing us to see some of the footage that Beanie filmed with his camera. This helps to show that this is how Beanie really is. That footage was not shot by the director so we know that it is not influenced by his ideas; it is from the real authentic point of view of the character. All in all I enjoyed Mule Skinner Blues - I feel that it has the potential to change the documentary film genre because of the way it used elements of fiction filmmaking.
    10allbell

    Art as respiration

    "Mule Skinner Blues" is a beautiful, messy, extravagant little documentary made about struggling dreamers by struggling dreamers for the struggling dreamer in all of us.

    Go to any film festival that features genuine, undiscovered filmmakers, and you will find a few glamorous filmmakers who use $100 bills for facial tissue, along with hundreds of diehards who have spent all their money. and all the money anyone would give them or lend them, trying to put a little of the love and terror in their hearts on screen.

    "Mule Skinner Blues," the song, is about a woman who is pleading for a chance to sing -- to a team of mules. To get away from the boredom and sadness in her life.

    "Mule Skinner Blues" is about regular people in rural Florida -- not the richest, but not really the poorest -- who want to sing, write scripts, design costumes, make a horror film, etc. -- to find some way to rise above the pain in their lives, and turn both the pain AND the joy in their hearts into art.

    The people in the film talk wistfully about becoming famous, but they're a lot more interesting than the typical twentysomething would-be artiste in the big city, or the typical established artist. First, because they live in a spectacularly beautiful part of northern Jacksonville (even if you DON'T feel the terror, you WILL feel the urge to move into a trailer park); they're older and have better war stories; they have a sense of humor; and, because they're so far from the big money, they're just more real.

    When they screw up, they can't fall back on trust funds or Mommy or Daddy. They don't have trust funds, and, for the most part, they don't have living parents. If they have living parents, chances are they're the ones feeding the parents.

    If you see the film and come away saying, "Those people are not all that different from the people who made 'Mule Skinner Blues,' or the people back in my neighborhood who have a garage band. Or the old ladies who get together for a quilting club," well, yes. What exactly is wrong with that?????
    7billy-217

    not as bad as other reviewers think

    I stumbled across this movie while channel surfing late one night last week on one of the Sundance Channels. I was taken with the hope, as misplaced as it seems to be, demonstrated by the residents of the trailer park. All of them seem to believe that they are only one short step shy of being discovered as talented writers, musicians and/or actors. What is wrong with that? They all may be delusional to think that they are really talented enough to make it as professional entertainers, but that kind of dream seems to keep them going. More power to them. Drugs and alcohol may blur their dreams, but allow them to keep pretending as well. On the other hand, if you really believe it, are you pretending? I know a lot of people not unlike these folks. Here in Southern Appalachia, there are plenty of characters who need to believe that they will rise above the grinding poverty of their lives and become rich, famous or celebrated for their art. These are real people, existing on the underbelly of society, one short step away from abject poverty. Yet they continue to believe that something really good will happen to them in the long run. It may be sad, but it is also touching. This movie made me feel something for the subjects of the documentary. We are surrounded by these characters. Just look around sometime.
    10studiobfilm

    inspirational film about getting your dreams forfilled in life

    I saw this movie at cinemavillage in New York and this is a great film about never giving up on your dreams and trying to put your personal mark on life. The characters in the film are at first funny and you laugh about the way they talk about becoming entertainers while they are surely not the most brilliant talents that ever lived.

    But then their drive to keep going, even when the odds are against them captured me. That sure touched me as a struggling filmmaker who is also not that talented, but I know that if I keep trying maybe I will get some recognition. The film is also a very on-documentary kind of film because it uses all kinds of feature film elements like stylized interviews and dream sequences. The filmmakers clearly wanted to escape from the old fashioned institute that makes most docs so boring that you can't manipulate any thing in "reality". That's bull**** ofcourse because the minute you turn on a camera and decide to point it in a certain direction you are manipulating.

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    Related interests

    Dziga Vertov in L'Homme à la caméra (1929)
    Documentary

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Quotes

      Beanie Andrew: If you fall in the mud, you might come back as a gorilla.

    • Crazy credits
      "No gorillas were harmed in the making of this documentary. All scenes depicting violence to gorillas were simulated."
    • Connections
      Features L'Étrange Créature du lac noir (1954)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 13, 2001 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Jacksonville, Florida, USA
    • Production companies
      • Bean-Tyle Productions
      • Solaris
      • Steel Carrot
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $10,106
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $2,553
      • Apr 14, 2002
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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