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Entertainment

  • 2015
  • R
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
Gregg Turkington in Entertainment (2015)
Trailer for Entertainment
Play trailer2:27
2 Videos
87 Photos
Drama

En route to meet his estranged daughter and attempting to revive his dwindling career, a broken, middle-aged comedian plays a string of dead-end shows in the Mojave desert.En route to meet his estranged daughter and attempting to revive his dwindling career, a broken, middle-aged comedian plays a string of dead-end shows in the Mojave desert.En route to meet his estranged daughter and attempting to revive his dwindling career, a broken, middle-aged comedian plays a string of dead-end shows in the Mojave desert.

  • Director
    • Rick Alverson
  • Writers
    • Rick Alverson
    • Gregg Turkington
    • Tim Heidecker
  • Stars
    • Gregg Turkington
    • John C. Reilly
    • Tye Sheridan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    3.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rick Alverson
    • Writers
      • Rick Alverson
      • Gregg Turkington
      • Tim Heidecker
    • Stars
      • Gregg Turkington
      • John C. Reilly
      • Tye Sheridan
    • 37User reviews
    • 80Critic reviews
    • 65Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Videos2

    Entertainment
    Trailer 2:27
    Entertainment
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:27
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:27
    Official Trailer

    Photos87

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    Top cast65

    Edit
    Gregg Turkington
    Gregg Turkington
    • The Comedian
    John C. Reilly
    John C. Reilly
    • Cousin John
    Tye Sheridan
    Tye Sheridan
    • Eddie the Opener
    Amy Seimetz
    Amy Seimetz
    • Woman in Bar
    Lotte Verbeek
    Lotte Verbeek
    • The Chromotherapist
    Michael Cera
    Michael Cera
    • Tommy
    Annabella Lwin
    • Airplane Tour Guide
    Mike Hickey
    • The Heckler
    Craig Holland
    • Oil Field Tour Guide
    Juventino Martin
    • Gael
    Sergio Estrada
    • Alejandro
    Susan Cernas
    • Alejandro's Daughter Maria
    Kevin Guthrie
    Kevin Guthrie
    • Ghost Town Tour Guide
    Fabian Euresti
    • Orange Grove Worker
    • (as Fabian Euresti Sr)
    Tonantzin Carmelo
    Tonantzin Carmelo
    • Teresa
    Juan Cueto
    • John's Father-in-Law
    David Yow
    David Yow
    • Party Host
    Dustin Guy Defa
    Dustin Guy Defa
    • Ruben
    • Director
      • Rick Alverson
    • Writers
      • Rick Alverson
      • Gregg Turkington
      • Tim Heidecker
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    5.73.3K
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    Featured reviews

    8Sergeant_Tibbs

    Anti-entertainment. Brace yourself.

    Audiences not braced for what Rick Alverson's Entertainment has to offer will be doomed for an unpleasant and gruelling experience. This is anti-entertainment if anything, not in the sense that it uses anti-jokes but the comedian protagonist is on the lowest rung of humour. Using cheap sight gags, resorting to insulting the audience, taking uncalled-for hits at celebrities and using not-so-funny voices, the laughs the characters do get are cheap. This comedian is a 19 year routine from lead actor Gregg Turkington, otherwise known as Neil Hamburger, but that backstory has no relevance to the film's narrative as he's otherwise unnamed. It's performance art, but also satirical as it's not far from the truth of what some comedians actually resort to in their acts. In that sense, it's a study on what's considered entertainment, why people are drawn to it and what it means to people.

    The film chronicles a cycle of repetitive sequences that grow darker in despair. The comedian attends novelty tours on his journey, browsing at eye-sore mechanical marvels in the middle of the desert, often away from the main group and guide. Then he performs at third-rate gigs such as dingy bars, often saying how he's travelled from miles away but never where from exactly, and gets upset when the audience don't laugh at his jokes. That's all part of his act, however, but it doesn't get them more comfortable. His warm-up act is an amateur mime artist played by Tye Sheridan, though how they're travelling together remains a mystery. He calls his estranged daughter before bed in hopes that she'll pick up and reconnect, but it's ostensibly in vain. Some other characters take him aside, such as detours from his wealthy cousin played by John C. Reilly, an example of success, and Michael Cera in a four minute cameo as a hustler who wants company.

    It feels like the films of Roy Andersson by way of David Lynch as a surrealistic nightmare. From constant stumbles, the comedian is on a broken American dream, both as a father and as a budding entrepreneur with his comedy act – which it must be noted, is far from his stoic self. He seems willingly isolated offstage, but abrasive when he's onstage. If comedy is an escape for some, is that necessarily a good thing? It can be cryptic in these scenes that don't tie in together, but they're all expressing his anxieties and failure in his career and fatherhood. Almost every gig he does is greeted by an apathetic 'good show' from the manager while he looks dead inside. The tragedy is off-screen and internal but it's palpable, highlighted by the washed-out and carefully composed photography. Entertainment is a very unsettling film, and at one point near its middle I found myself tested by it, but it's thoroughly profound for those who want something challenging and hauntingly beautiful.

    8/10

    Read more @ The Awards Circuit (http://www.awardscircuit.com/)
    7themissingpatient

    A Guide through the Dark Side of Entertainment

    An exploration through the dark side of entertainment. A feverish introspective nightmare of a character who remains more mysterious by the end of the film than at the beginning. Entertainment drags us along on a slow road trip through the desert with a comedian who loses his self along the way. The line between reality and dreams become completely blurred. The whole film seems like an inside joke the filmmakers refuse to let us in on. Sure, there are funny moments, especially during the first half, but by the end you'll be left with more questions than answers.

    It's emotionally heavy, bizarre, heart-breaking, surreal and even somewhat disturbing. What is truly masterful is how, without ever fully understanding who this character is, the film causes us to lose our sense of reality with him. He is explored, with great depth, inwardly without us ever sure of who he is on the outside. Rick Alverson has perfectly re-created the dream logic story telling techniques and beautifully strange cinematography of a David Lynch film. Yet, he does this using his own voice, which is strikingly original. Entertainment is somewhere between a broken character study, an absurdist comedy and modern tragedy.

    Entertainment is not for everyone and if you try using your brain while watching it, you may give yourself a migraine. If you try to use your heart to feel your way through, you won't be sure where to put it and may feel depressed afterwards. This film is a trip that you have to allow to wash over you. Let yourself get lost in it's wonderful visuals and be sure to have friends to discuss it with afterwards.
    7renasmohsen

    Not for everyone for sure

    Roy anderson characters if they revealed them selves in a clearer way, arther fleck/joker if he was a real person these are what you'll get from Entertainment in addition to the melancholic and depressing sceneries. But best of it is the intense, surreal and haunting soundtrack. But as I think it's one of those movies that you'll either love it or hate it no grey area here.
    6socrates4

    Average And Somewhat Forgettable

    ENTERTAINMENT is another one of these dramas about comedians. There aren't a ton of them, but there are perhaps a few too many. And they're all mostly the same. If you've seen one, you've seen them all.

    This one tackles the topic in a slightly fresh way, but I still couldn't help but feel as if maybe it shouldn't have been made. Maybe there is something here for some people, but I wasn't crazy about it. The acting was at least decent, but overall it's pretty forgettable. Do not recommend.
    7runamokprods

    Fascinating and ambitious, if not always successful

    A fascinating and ambitious mess, with echoes of David Lynch, Jim Jarmusch and Stanley Kubrick among others. Beautifully shot and full of careful and striking lighting and compositions, this tragic-comic character study of an abrasive, sad, utterly unsuccessful stand up comic has a number of surreal scenes and images that are deeply affecting and/or quite funny.

    There are also a number of scenes that seem needlessly repetitive, or working way too hard to be self-consciously weird. And the film definitely feels long.

    Back on the plus side, it's made more complex and interesting by the fact that the stand up character in his off-stage real life is outwardly nothing like the hyper-annoying, aggressively unfunny and gross person he plays on stage. He's quiet and introverted and seems more terribly and dangerously depressed than angry. However, under the surface the comic and his on-stage alter ego share a desperate sense of alienation from other human beings, and it's that terrible modern isolation that's at the heart of the film.

    Extending that exploration, 'Entertainment' plays with an interesting meta idea. What if an arty, self-referential surrealist comic like Andy Kaufman (or this film's lead Gregg Turkington) spent their career playing their most difficult and abrasive alter-ego like Kaufman's Tony Clifton (or star Turkington's Neil Hamburger, who is the basis of the on stage persona here), but instead of playing for crowds of hip and 'knowing' urban young people 'in on the joke', they only got to do that act in sad, barely populated working class dive bars out in the middle of the California desert, where the inside joke is totally lost for the audience. It raises interesting questions about perception and comedy, and how much of our enjoyment of hip ironic distance in modern entertainment is a cover for something wounded and broken inside us.

    It's a difficult film I'd be hesitant in recommending to most other people, and that I have my own reservations about. Yet I find that since I've seen it, moments, images and performances are aggressively haunting me in a powerful way, and make me look forward to seeing it again.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Gregg Turkington plays a version of his stage persona, Neil Hamburger.
    • Quotes

      The Comedian: Why don't rapists eat at T.G.I. Friday's? Well, it's hard to rape with a stomachache.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 540: Entertainment (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Black Night
      Written by Frank Sinatra Jr.

      Performed by Frank Sinatra Jr.

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    FAQ

    • How long is Entertainment?
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 13, 2015 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Развлечения
    • Filming locations
      • Ridgecrest, California, USA(bar scene)
    • Production companies
      • Armando Montelongo Productions
      • Arts+Labor
      • Autumn Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $55,506
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,132
      • Nov 15, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $55,506
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 43 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.66 : 1

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