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Joshua Tree, 1951: Un portrait de James Dean

Original title: Joshua Tree, 1951: A Portrait of James Dean
  • 2012
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
901
YOUR RATING
Joshua Tree, 1951: Un portrait de James Dean (2012)
JOSHUA TREE, 1951 is the provocative and mesmerizing experimental portrait of an icon. Framed in a series of dreamlike, sometimes hallucinatory vignettes, the film draws on striking textures (velvety black-and-white 35mm, grainy bursts of color), highly stylized form, and the poetry of Arthur Rimbaud to question not only the established narrative of James Dean's life but also the process of star-making itself. Written and directed by Matthew Mishory. Starring James Preston, Dan Glenn, Edward Singletary, and Dalilah Rain.
Play trailer2:46
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Joshua Tree, 1951 is the provocative and mesmerizing experimental portrait of an icon.Joshua Tree, 1951 is the provocative and mesmerizing experimental portrait of an icon.Joshua Tree, 1951 is the provocative and mesmerizing experimental portrait of an icon.

  • Director
    • Matthew Mishory
  • Writer
    • Matthew Mishory
  • Stars
    • James Preston
    • Dan Glenn
    • Clare Grant
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    901
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Matthew Mishory
    • Writer
      • Matthew Mishory
    • Stars
      • James Preston
      • Dan Glenn
      • Clare Grant
    • 13User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    JOSHUA TREE, 1951 - a film by Matthew Mishory - Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:46
    JOSHUA TREE, 1951 - a film by Matthew Mishory - Official Trailer

    Photos5

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    Top cast40

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    James Preston
    James Preston
    • James Dean
    Dan Glenn
    Dan Glenn
    • The Roommate
    Clare Grant
    Clare Grant
    • Beverly
    Erin Daniels
    Erin Daniels
    • The Roommate's Mother
    Rafael Morais
    Rafael Morais
    • Johny
    Edward Singletary Jr.
    Edward Singletary Jr.
    • Roger
    Darri Ingolfsson
    Darri Ingolfsson
    • James DeWeerd
    Edgar Morais
    Edgar Morais
    • Franco
    Dalilah Rain
    Dalilah Rain
    • Violet
    Christopher Higgins
    Christopher Higgins
    • Arthur Rimbaud
    Clint Catalyst
    Clint Catalyst
    • Johnny the Bartender
    Jay Donnell
    Jay Donnell
    • Preston
    Tony Herbert
    Tony Herbert
    • The Officer
    Elizabeth Hirsch-Tauber
    Elizabeth Hirsch-Tauber
    • Claudia
    David Pevsner
    David Pevsner
    • The Acting Teacher
    Azrael Renea des Reves
    • Pool Guest
    • (as Azrael Renea)
    Ian Patrick Anderson
    • The Diver
    Jason Layden
    • Young Man in Class
    • Director
      • Matthew Mishory
    • Writer
      • Matthew Mishory
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.1901
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    Featured reviews

    8randallross822

    Beautiful Dream

    I saw the film last night at the Outfest Film Festival in Los Angeles. This is a visually beautiful new film about James Dean, the iconic actor who is still very revered and loved and whose film legacy still continues strong 57 years after his death. This is not the typical biopic though, it gets into details about his life that were not well known until recently. James Preston is excellent playing James Dean expressing his ambition and vulnerability, willing to play the game in Hollywood to get a chance and still keeping the powers that be from ruling or controlling him. He was a rebel in the sense that he wanted to be true to himself and his talent above all else and lived and experienced a great deal and achieved his dream by the age of 24 when he died. The film takes place in the few years before his acting led to the three films he would do eventually that would propel his star and fame and became his legacy. He's in the process here of becoming a real actor and starting to understand who he wants to be as a man. In 1951 Dean was only 20 and he was trying to figure himself out and those around him and to understand what's important to him. Much of the film seems like almost dream like sequences or partial scene memories filmed in beautiful black and white striking images, the cinematography is top notch! I've read biographies on Dean's life and the movie is accurate from the accounts I've read. The director/writer Matthew Mishory, did a very good job making a film about his subject in a way that's unique and hasn't been done in the same way before. The supporting cast is very good as well. I recommend seeing it and I'm looking forward to seeing it again!
    5Suradit

    Snapshot through a smudged lens

    Had this movie been about a fictional Hollywood actor, I think I would have had a better opinion of it. I have no special insight into or biographical knowledge of James Dean, but having seen his movies not long after they were made and watched some more recent shows about him on TV, I had a sense of who he was. He always seemed to me an attractive, erotic, if somewhat difficult to understand, icon of the 1950's. I grew up in the 50's and 60's, and his rebelliousness struck a chord in me. I always felt an ill-defined empathy for what was driving his behavior.

    There were occasions when the actor in this movie managed to evoke a feel for Dean, but they were just momentary, static poses. There was really very little about either his appearance or behavior that helped me to connect to the James Dean I think I knew.

    In general, when watching a good movie I expect to be drawn into it and to forget that I am watching actors acting. It's a sort of voyeurism. In this movie, I never forgot that I was watching actors act, reading lines written for them by someone else about someone they neither knew particularly well nor cared very very much about.

    Basically I was disappointed. Maybe my expectations were too high, but I never really felt I was watching anything to do with James Dean and the heavy black & white moodiness of the presentation seemed more contrived and ponderous than evocative.
    6twilliams76

    Like Dean himself ... promising but unfulfilled.

    For James Dean fans -- who only made three feature films in his lifetime (East of Eden, Rebel Without a Cause and Giant) -- this will lamentably NOT be the biopic many would be hoping for. The title actually gives this away by calling itself a "portrait" of Dean by highlighting a brief portion of his life in Joshua Tree, California in 1951. Dean didn't make "it big" in film until 1955 (the year of his death) and his two consecutive Oscar nominations were posthumous in 56 and 57. This small film highlights a small phase of Dean's life as he struggles with acting and his drive to become famous.

    In the film, Dean is taking an acting class to learn the ropes and establish his footing in southern California while he lives with a nice classmate who apparently has some deeper feelings for him -- the film is based upon the writing of this roommate. Much has been said about Dean living a bisexual lifestyle and this film "goes there" -- some won't want to see how much skin is on display here (there isn't even that much but it might upset some is all) -- although the film never really goes into any of the particulars with any of Dean's relationships so the audience never knows if Dean felt anything for anybody else or if all of his moves were calculated and methodical ... hoping something would come from this fling or that encounter.

    The film feels rather pretentious at times (it is about James Dean!) but its stylish elements save it from being loathsome and detestable while the acting feels amateurish yet adequate. The landscape and views of Joshua Tree are breathtakingly beautiful and these simple moments in the film are gorgeously shot. There are parts of this that are not great but just when a moment is becoming almost unbearable the film offers up something commendable that makes one take notice.

    There is a lot of promise here (like its subject matter) and it is disappointing that the film couldn't be more (again ... like its subject matter). This is probably a hard film to find and track-down and it won't be for everybody; but those fans of Dean's work probably won't mind seeing this small tribute to the star trying to make it in 1951 while not catching any breaks. It isn't much and is rather lite.

    Joshua Tree, 1951 is more "art" than anything else ... it is a what if (as most of it is merely alleged; but what isn't?). James himself is a what if ... if only. There was something there with Dean ... and there is something here too. It just comes up short and never lives up to its potential. Again ... truly fitting and the disappointment one feels as the credits role is the exact disappointment that should be felt for this life that was cut short.

    If this were the filmmaker's intent, I'd say "genius"; but I'm not certain of that. As is, though, ... it is quite good.
    jm10701

    Should have been titled: A Portrait of James Preston

    If you've never seen East of Eden or Rebel Without a Cause or Giant; and if you know and care nothing about James Dean; and if you'd rather look at Abercrombie & Fitch ads than watch a movie; and if you like to daydream that all beautiful men are gay; and if you like gazing at James Preston; and if a line like "It was as if I had seen in black and white my entire life and suddenly I saw in color" (in an excruciatingly solemn movie that switches between black and white and color) sends you into ecstasies of intellectual bliss, then this is the movie for you.

    If you HAVE seen the real James Dean in ANY movie, then you cannot for one second accept this milky crap as anything but one very stupid man's wet dream. Matthew Mishory should be slapped silly for wasting fantastic cinematography on this silly, stupid, pretentious movie.

    I admit that James Preston is fabulously beautiful, and if this movie hadn't even pretended to be about James Dean, then I could have gazed in drooling stupor at him in every frame. But his transcendent gorgeousness is one reason he makes an absolutely terrible James Dean. Dean looked and acted more like James Franco than like James Preston.

    The other reason Preston makes an absolutely terrible James Dean is that he's a smug, self-satisfied, talentless wimp, gorgeous on the outside with nothing but marshmallows inside. Dean was raw, vulnerable, fascinating, unstable and dangerous as a lit firecracker, not at all the cool, smug, calculating opportunist Mishory makes him here because it's all Preston's acting ability allows.

    The only wise move Mishory made was not letting Preston try to recreate even one second of any performance Dean ever gave. The only glimpse of Dean "acting" we see is him jumping over a table in acting class.

    The James Dean of this movie is like the real James Dean in only one way: he's short.
    1Johnboy1221

    What a mess this is!

    This movie is simply horrendous! From start to finish, I had trouble staying focused on what was going on. The dialog, and the story in general was boring and unbelievable. Add that to the fact that the actors were terrible, and you get a real mess. James Preston, while handsome, was no James Dean, by any stretch of the imagination. His hair is too long, he looks nothing like Dean in the face, and his mannerisms are deplorable. And it is not sexy, if that was the intent. The movie features long lustful looks at naked and half naked men and women, but hasn't one ounce of sensual appeal. A waste of 93 minutes. You've been warned. This movie is not recommended by me.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Cinematographer Michael Marius Pessah shot the black-and-white sequences on Fuji color film, removing the color in the transfer to create the glossy yet contrasted look.
    • Connections
      References Family Theatre: Hill Number One: A Story of Faith and Inspiration (1951)
    • Soundtracks
      I Fall in Love Too Easily
      Performed by Jeff Harnar

      Written by Sammy Cahn

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 7, 2012 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • A Portrait of James Dean
    • Filming locations
      • Joshua Tree National Park, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Iconoclastic Features
      • Jay-X Entertainment
      • MGDB Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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