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Iowa

  • 2005
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
4.9/10
457
YOUR RATING
Rosanna Arquette, John Savage, Matt Farnsworth, and Diane Foster in Iowa (2005)
A tale of corruption in this independent drama from Director Matt Farnsworth
Play trailer1:53
1 Video
28 Photos
CrimeDrama

A cautionary tale of love, crime, fantasy and addiction that follows two young Iowan lovers who decide to go into the "batch" business - cooking their own methamphetamine - only to watch it ... Read allA cautionary tale of love, crime, fantasy and addiction that follows two young Iowan lovers who decide to go into the "batch" business - cooking their own methamphetamine - only to watch it burn a searing hole in their lives.A cautionary tale of love, crime, fantasy and addiction that follows two young Iowan lovers who decide to go into the "batch" business - cooking their own methamphetamine - only to watch it burn a searing hole in their lives.

  • Director
    • Matt Farnsworth
  • Writer
    • Matt Farnsworth
  • Stars
    • Matt Farnsworth
    • Diane Foster
    • John Savage
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.9/10
    457
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Matt Farnsworth
    • Writer
      • Matt Farnsworth
    • Stars
      • Matt Farnsworth
      • Diane Foster
      • John Savage
    • 19User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
    • 35Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Iowa
    Trailer 1:53
    Iowa

    Photos27

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    Top cast27

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    Matt Farnsworth
    Matt Farnsworth
    • Esper Harte
    Diane Foster
    Diane Foster
    • Donna Huffman
    John Savage
    John Savage
    • Irv Huffman
    Rosanna Arquette
    Rosanna Arquette
    • Effie Harte
    Michael T. Weiss
    Michael T. Weiss
    • Larry Clarkson
    David Backus
    • Nick Slavens
    Amanda Tepe
    Amanda Tepe
    • Dominique
    William Wayne
    William Wayne
    • Joey Wilhoff
    • (as Billy Wayne)
    Mickey Jones
    Mickey Jones
    • Darrell McNeely
    John Tracy
    • Leo Harte
    Muse Watson
    Muse Watson
    • Sheriff Walker
    Jack Orend
    • Mortician
    John Bliss
    John Bliss
    • Pastor Krause
    James Serpento
    • Gesture Man
    Stephen Whitney
    • Tweeker
    Rocky Marquette
    Rocky Marquette
    • Cousin Jake
    Golden Farnsworth
    • Silly Milly
    Karen McFall
    • Aunt Fonda
    • Director
      • Matt Farnsworth
    • Writer
      • Matt Farnsworth
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    4.9457
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    Featured reviews

    8nmllover2003

    A sobering perspective of meth use

    Although I wouldn't say this is the best movie I've seen, I thought that it did drive home the addicting and devastating effects of meth production, sale and use. The acting, for the most part, was captivating. I've lived in Iowa for almost a year now, and some folks have been worried about the perspective this gives of the state. I think that the movie really could have been placed in any rural community and still drive home the point. Quite honestly, I think that without the sex scenes, if this movie was shown to junior high school and high school students, it would quell any curiosity to try meth (particularly, I think, the tweaking scene and its aftermath). I still think "Requiem for a Dream" is a better movie that talks about the effects of dreams and the use of drugs to attain those dreams, but I have recommended this movie to many friends as a must-see movie.
    2strain6

    This is like a bad student film.

    The week before I saw Iowa, I saw Art School Confidential, in which a pretentious student makes a film and can't decide whether he wants it to be art or violent exploitation. Iowa could be the film that he made. I can see elements of much better movies in Iowa - Spun and Natural Born Killers. However, in addition to artiness, both those movies had good character development and coherent story lines. Iowa. This movie stumbles to a preposterous end. I have to admit that it had consistency. This movie is bad from beginning to end and not particularly worse or better in any part. The actors all did what they could. Roseanna Arquette deserves better. She demonstrates that she is very talented, very funny, and very sexy. But why does she have to demonstrate it in this turd ball.
    2noralee

    Low Rent Meth Madness

    "Iowa" wants to be "Requiem for a Dream" for Midwest meth, but it comes across as a hard R rated "Reefer Madness".

    Yes, drugs are bad, and meth is horribly pernicious, as an addiction and how it destroys people, families and communities. But these characters who are either dumb or ridiculous and the eye-rolling plot won't teach that lesson to anyone.

    While writer/director/star Matt Farnsworth has some charisma on screen, his partner Diane Foster plays a wincibly silly wide-eyed innocent corrupted by drugsas was already satirized by Susan Sarandon in "The Rocky Horror Picture Show". I really felt sorry for her for all the totally unnecessary nudity she was put through. It wasn't until the end of the film that I realized I was supposed to think these two were recent high-school graduates to explain some of their naiveté, as we are bombarded by their school photos, but if so, they even looked older than the folks on "The O.C.". While they have good chemistry on screen, they are a pale imitation of a "Badlands"-type couple.

    The guest stars are badly used. Michael T. Weiss, who was so good in TV's "The Pretender", is completely ludicrous as a corrupt parole officer and his brutal violence is just plain crazy, as his character pretty much ruins any social significance for the film. Rosanna Arquette has to be even sleazier than she rolled around for David Cronenberg as a very low rent Livia Soprano. John Savage even has to mouth the old baby boomer excuses about I did pot but this is worse. A Goth chick shows up, with the odd explanation that she's a stripper from Des Moines. The obligatory Latino drug dealer appears - in Iowa?

    With a limited budget, the interior view of meth use is portrayed quite vividly, with quite scary hallucinations. We certainly see them go crazy.

    While the Iowa locations are used very well (including an amusing scene of a propane gas robbery), the accents and church references are confusingly Southern Baptist. Guns seem to be used by law abiding and law breaking citizens here more than in any inner-city drug-dealing movie.

    The songs of Iowa's best known bard Greg Brown are used throughout, but oddly are not listed in the credits. I hope they were used with permission.

    I caught this at its commercial run in NYC because I missed it at the Tribeca Film Festival where it got considerable-- and inexplicable-- buzz.
    7joel_the_ghoul

    A harsh look at drugs in the heartland

    I saw this movie on a trip to Iowa, and not knowing much about Matt Farnsworth, the director (or the subject of meth, for that matter), I had no preconceived expectations, but walked away impressed and educated by a first-time filmmaker's jarring exploration into addiction.

    Though Farnsworth doesn't quite explore the psychology of drug addiction as much as he could, the frenetic, visual representation illustrates the world of meth from a user's perspective, providing a sharp contract to the small town setting of the film. Farnsworth is capable in the lead role, but its Michael T. Weiss's turn as a sadistic, power-tripping sheriff that steals the show.

    A couple of complaints: Fransworth occasionally goes for shock value, mistaking it for a message of rude awakening. And the hand-held, store-bought-video-camera interludes of the Iowa landscape seem forced and shlocky. The landscape means very little to the film (presumably less than Farnsworth thinks it does, since the movie is named for the state it resides in), as this story could be easily translated to any city (big or small) in the states.

    I've read Farnsworth has been leading an anti-meth crusade, and while that's honorable, I hope (for selfish reason) that he has not abandoned directing for this higher calling. I can't wait to see what he does with his second go-round.
    7jsmact

    Tribeca Film Screening

    I just saw this film at the Tribeca film festival and it had some great moments. It is reminiscent of Pulp Fiction, Blow, and Natural Born Killers, except it only takes place in a small town. Farnsworth did a brilliant job, especially considering it is his directorial debut and how young he is. There are some very gory scenes and it is definitely suspenseful. The camera work is very good. The beginning is a little slow, but most of the film is powerful. I have no complaints except that maybe there was a lot of stuff that was done for shock value. I am sure this film will get him some attention and more work. I recommend this to people who like films with drug and violent themes. There are some messages in it, but this is not a highly intellectual film. I don't normally write reviews, so I hope this is helpful.

    -J

    Storyline

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    • Quotes

      Esper Harte: [pointing a gun at Larry] Drop your pants; I wanna see *your* penis.

      Larry Clarkson: What?

      Esper Harte: Drop your goddamn pants; I wanna see your penis!

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    FAQ15

    • How long is IOWA?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 22, 2005 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • IOWA
    • Filming locations
      • Centerville, Iowa, USA
    • Production company
      • Full Fathom 5
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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