... ain't no trip to Cleveland
‘Bottle Rocket’ is the story of three men all searching for something (whether they know it or not). Anthony (Luke Wilson) is a lost soul who has just checked himself out of a mental institution where he’s been recuperating from ‘exhaustion’. Dignan (Owen Wilson) ... Read review
Bottle Rocketis a quietly daffy comedy that should have been an indie hit, but ended up ... more
being ignored by audiences. Too bad; it's a wonderfully sustained caper movie about friends whose career choice is all wrong. Low-key Anthony (Luke Wilson) and high...
Postage & Packaging: £1.21 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
An offbeat crime caper that turns convention on its head. Owen Wilson, in a star-making ... more
performance, co-wrote the screenplay about three friends who attempt to escape their suburban boredom through a life of crime. But these bickering, bumbling thieves are no match for the local 'godfather' (James Caan) who leads them into the biggest heist of their careers. Co-starring Luke Wilson and Bob Musgrave in their film debuts, Bottle Rocket is a cult comedy hit.
Vater Rikki Rockett's Bottle Rocket, Signature Serie Drum Sticks, Wood Tip, Länge 16", ... more
Durchmesser 0,580", The Bottle Rockett measures between a 5A and 5B with a unique handle built into the grip, This handle helps prevent the sticks from slipping out of your hands while playing
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An offbeat crime caper that turns convention on its head. Owen Wilson (I Spy The Royal ... more
Tenenbaums) in a star-making performance co-wrote the screenplay about three friends who attempt to escape their suburban boredum through a life of crime. But these bickering bumbling thieves are no match for the local 'Godfather' (James Caan-Mickey Blue Eyes0 who leads them into the biggest heist of their careers. Co-starring Luke Wilson (Legally Blonde Charlie's Angels) and Bob Musgrave in their film debuts Bottle Rocket is a comedy hit.
Postage & Packaging:£0.00 Availability:3-5 working days
Meet the Bottle Rocket Stage One. The Stage One is our most accessible Class A discrete ... more
solid state mic with a foundation for interchangeable capsules including Blues nine vintage lollipop-style capsules the Bottle Caps. This bayonet-mounted system gives the user unlimited flexibility and a wide variety of tonal characteristics and pickup patterns all in one mic!
Postage & Packaging:£0.00 Availability:See merchant site
Production Year: 2004 - Comedy - Director: John Hay - Original Language: English - Classification: 15 years and over - Starring: Jennifer Love Hewitt, Jimi Mistry, Kate Miles, Dougray Scott
Comedy - Director: Richard Boden, Mandie Fletcher, Martin Shardlow - Original Language: English - Classification: 15 years and over - Starring: Hugh Laurie, Miranda Richardson, Stephen Fry, Brian Blessed, Tim McInnerny, Tony Robinson, Rowan Atkinson
Comedy - Original Language: English - Classification: 12 years and over - Starring: Tessa Peake-Jones, Buster Merryfield, David Jason, Nicholas Lyndhurst
Comedy - Director: Terry Jones, Terry Gilliam - Original Language: English - Classification: 15 years and over - Starring: Carol Cleveland, Eric Idle, Graham Chapman, Terry Gilliam, John Cleese, Michael Palin, Terry Jones
Advantages: A witty, original and appealing slice of cinema Disadvantages: Some will find it pretentious
...‘Rushmore’). Though the soundtrack in Bottle Rocket is less extensive than in the later films it is equally as triumphant and as well as the unusual but brilliant choice of a Proclaimers song contains the obligatory Anderson/Wilson choice of a Rolling Stones track. What further links the three films musically is Mark Mothersbaugh whose unusual and fast paced jazz score provides the perfect accompaniment to Anderson’s visuals. These are the sort of ... ...really helps to create the essence of a film.
I realise I have talked about Anderson and Wilson’s two later films extensively when telling you about ‘Bottle Rocket’; this is because they’re really an unofficial trilogy. Like Kevin Smith’s Jersey Trilogy these films are not joined by plot or characters (and feature the same actors playing different roles) but they are intrinsically linked. The films take place in the same universe, ... more
On the run from Johnny Law ... ain't no trip to Cleveland
‘Bottle Rocket’ is the story of three men all searching for something (whether they know it or not). Anthony (Luke Wilson) is a lost soul who has just checked himself out of a mental institution where he’s been recuperating from ‘exhaustion’. Dignan (Owen Wilson) doesn’t realise it’s a voluntary facility and so Anthony, not wanting to ruin his friend’s elaborate escape plan, asks permission to climb down bed sheets from his first floor room (his doctor pulling them up for him after he’s gone). With Anthony safely out of the nut house the friends are now ready to embark on Dignan’s substantially more elaborate seventy-five year plan, consisting of practise raids, goals, targets and drawn with felt tips, that will lead inexorably to the boys becoming master criminals. They start by robbing Anthony’s parents’ house (without taking any actual valuables), but the jobs are going to get bigger and they’ll need a getaway driver. After Bob’s (Robert Musgrave) successful interview (mostly successful because, unlike Anthony and Dignan, Bob owns a car) the gang are ready to start their crime spree – at the local bookstore. What follows is a tale of romance, loyalty and friendship (with a backdrop of the most inept heist in cinema history).
Owen Wilson and Wes Anderson met in a playwriting course at the University of Texas, their mutual love of films and the absurd led them to strike up a filmmaking partnership, which has produced some modern American classics. ‘Rushmore’ and ‘The Royal Tenenbaums’ have a visual style and intelligence which places them far above the standard Hollywood fare which overruns our multiplexes. Back in the early nineties Wilson and Anderson had a full length script that they couldn’t get made and so produced a thirteen minute black and white short, which got them a showing at Sundance, caught the eye of producers Polly Platt and James L Brooks and eventually got them a $7,000 000 budget and the chance to make a movie. The result is ‘Bottle Rocket’ a ninety minute labour of love, which marks the debut for director Anderson, writers Anderson and Wilson as well as Luke and Owen’s first acting job.
Like ‘Rushmore’ and the more famous ‘The Royal Tenenbaums’, ‘Bottle Rocket’ is not a film centred on plot. As far as story goes the robberies are fairly unimportant. The film is really about Dignan’s desperate desire for respect (expressed through his childish dreams of becoming an outlaw) how this impacts the relationship with his best friend Anthony (who only enters a life of crime to make his friend’s dreams come true), and on the life of the ineffectual Bob. Anthony only finds happiness when on the run (although technically the cops don’t appear to be chasing them) as it is in the refuge of a roadside Motel that Anthony meets and immediately falls in love with Inez (Lumi Cavazos) despite being unable to speak a word of Spanish. Bob’s desire to enter the criminal world is seemingly motivated by his desire to be in ‘a gang’ and perhaps to get away from his bullying older brother Future man (played by Luke and Owen’s bullying older brother Andrew). Wilson and Anderson write films about human relationships and ‘Bottle Rocket’ is no exception, it is full of faith that despite our flaws the human race is essentially good and the ties that bind us are greater than that which would try and tear us apart. It is a tale of love, friendship and loyalty (with a fair amount of stupidity thrown in).
The comedy comes largely from the witty and fast paced dialogue. It is eminently obvious that Anderson and Wilson had taken a play writing course before creating this screenplay. Rather than focusing on visual humour the jokes are subtle and have their roots in the great traditions of comedy. Dignan as a character is unable to see himself as ridiculous, although it is completely obvious to those around him and to us as an audience. This is not to say the subtlety of the humour will be to everyone’s taste. As an example, would you find it funny if when talking through an escape route and discussing the possibility of being a chased (even though it was unlikely to happen) a character said he was just being “hypocritical”? If not, then you might not laugh much at this film. There is the odd piece of more visual humour (usually involving someone getting beaten up in the back of a shot) but generally the laughs are relatively highbrow. It is a further credit to the warmth of the film that although the central character in the film is an idiot and his two gang members and so obviously flawed and incapable, you still care about them enormously and desperately want them too succeed.
You can’t help but wonder if there is a little of Dignan in Owen Wilson, he did write this part for himself. A little like Dignan, Wilson, despite his flaws (most notable his lack of leading man good looks), has bowled over his audience (in the form of Hollywood) and become a movie star. Watching his performance here it is not hard to see why. Dignan is an overgrown twelve-year-old with ADD, he is petulant, oversensitive and completely self-involved; but Wilson has such charm he makes him completely loveable. Owen Wilson just has that ability, to deliver dialogue and make it sound like he thought of it on the spot, he can make anything funny and has enormous screen charisma. What helps his performance further is the screen time he shares with his brother Luke; they talk over each other and around each other and have a chemistry which you probably don’t find very often outside siblings. It is a relationship repeated in the ‘The Royal Tenenbaums’ in which their roles are staggeringly similar. As far as Luke’s performance goes, he displays the sensitivity he has brought to every role since this film. Luke Wilson can perform head over heels in love like no one else and as Anthony the charismatic but naïve romantic provides the perfect foil for Owen’s wise ass, vulnerable loser. The supporting cast is competent and unusual. Lumi Cavazos provides an enigmatic but appealing turn as the object of Anthony’s affection and Shea Fowler a comically precautious performance as Anthony’s younger sister Grace (who is probably the most adult character in the film). The only star (when the film was made) involved is James Caan, who’s character ‘Mr Henry’ appears so late it is little more than a cameo. Mr Henry is Dignan’s hero; unsurprisingly he is sleazy and unscrupulous but persuasive, everything an overgrown teenager would aspire to be. Caan pulls it off effortlessly.
What is really appealing about Wes Anderson as a director is his ability to make the mundane magical. He seems obsessed with the everyday, with the small objects that make up the fabric of our lives. In all his films there are countless close-ups of small items and Anderson makes them truly beautiful. What pervades is a sense of nostalgia (though the film isn’t set in the past) Anderson filled the films with objects and props made between 1975 and 1979 so it would have an air of his and Wilson’s childhood. Anderson uses swift cuts, close ups and unusually framed shots to create a film that is visually exciting, unusual and striking. The attention to detail is reflected across the film in props, locations and the casting of even the smallest roles Anderson creates a film that screams quality (never showing its low budget) and gels effortlessly. The costumes are geeky, the cars are vintage, the script can be pretentious and the cast is full of misfits but the end product is achingly cool and this is testament to Anderson’s sense of style.
What further heightens the film’s air of chic is the brilliantly chosen soundtrack. In all three Anderson and Wilson films the soundtracks have been pivotal to the success of the final product (the opening use of ‘Hey Jude’ in ‘The Royal Tenenbaums’ the captivating ‘Oh Yoko’ in ‘Rushmore’). Though the soundtrack in Bottle Rocket is less extensive than in the later films it is equally as triumphant and as well as the unusual but brilliant choice of a Proclaimers song contains the obligatory Anderson/Wilson choice of a Rolling Stones track. What further links the three films musically is Mark Mothersbaugh whose unusual and fast paced jazz score provides the perfect accompaniment to Anderson’s visuals. These are the sort of films which urge you to buy the soundtrack, where music really helps to create the essence of a film.
I realise I have talked about Anderson and Wilson’s two later films extensively when telling you about ‘Bottle Rocket’; this is because they’re really an unofficial trilogy. Like Kevin Smith’s Jersey Trilogy these films are not joined by plot or characters (and feature the same actors playing different roles) but they are intrinsically linked. The films take place in the same universe, just slightly different from our own. It is a more intelligent and stylish world, one with a feeling of innocence and wistfulness and a wry sense of humour. It’s a world I wish I lived in…
Advantages: Good dialogue, good acting, interesting story Disadvantages: Is a bit of a slow moving story
...I figured I'd start with Bottle Rocket, as thats the first film that Wes directed and its also the first film that Owen and Luke Wilson and Bob Musgrave starred in too, the start of good things to come!
This movie I believe was written while Owen (and Luke(?)) and Wes were at university together in Texas in the 1990s and is now seen as a cult comedy hit.
Bottle Rocket is all about three friends who team up to escape their boring lifes and pursuit ... ...local criminal 'head honcho' who's played by James Caan, spotting them and convincing them to carry out a large heist - but is it too much for them to handle and will they get away with it?
The movie starts with Anthony (played by Luke Wilson) getting out out of a psychiatric ward (which he stayed at due to suffering exhaustion), with his friend Dignans help (played by Owen Wilson), even though he could voluntarily leave, Dignan was keen to try ...
IzzyS 23.09.2007
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Bottle Rocket (DVD)
The Review - Bottle Rocket, Wes Andersons first film is surely not his best but is still a worthy addition to the few films he has made. The script, as with all of Andersons other films, is witty, clever and quirky. Bottle Rocket gives the viewer a sign of things to come from Andersons other work. Such as the visual gags: matching yellow jump suits (the matching swim suits in The Life Aquatic and the matching red track suits in Tenenbaums) and the ...
narutogoku 11.08.2007 (13.08.2007)
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: somewhat helpful Review of Bottle Rocket (DVD)
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Advantages: Great performances, interesting characters, another good movie from Wes Disadvantages: None
Movie
This is another Wes Anderson movie that contains alot of his usual 'trademarks' found in his movies so far and I have to say, its one of my favourite Wes movies so far, next to Life Aquatic (which I've also written a review on, here on Ciao).
Its worth mentioning as an introduction as well about the movie itself, that this is another movie which Owen Wilson helped write. Both Owen and Wes wrote and were executive producers of this movie, though Owen doesn't really appear himself in the movie, so don't watch or buy it just to see him, as you'll be disappointed (though Owens brother and fellow actor Luke does make a fairly brief appearance in the movie as Miss Cross' old friend from Harvard). This movie dates from 1998 and was the follow up to 'BottleRocket', which both Wes and Owen also co-wrote.
I managed to buy the DVD ...
IzzyS 28.10.2007
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Rushmore (DVD)
The tale of three would-be thieves who prove the importance of friendship, honour and duty as they disastrously pursue a life of crime.
Release details
DVD Region
DVD
Studio(s)
SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT; CINRAM LOGISTICS, UCA; CINRAM LOGISTICS (SWINDON)
Release date
05/04/2004
No of Discs
1
Catalogue No
CDR 24127
Barcode
5035822412736
Composer
Mark Mothersbaugh
Languages
Main Language
English
Dubbed Language
French, German
Subtitle Language
Arabic, English, French, German, Hindi, Turkish
Technical information
Aspect Ratio
1.85 Wide Screen
Sound
Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital Surround, Dolby Digital 5.1
Special Features
Interactive menu
Dubbing Sound
Dolby Digital 5.1 English Dolby Digital Surround French German
DVD Description
The debut feature film for director Wes Anderson and actors Luke and Owen Wilson, BOTTLE ROCKET is a kind-hearted yet quirky tale about three friends who fashion themselves into modern-day robbers. After leaving his voluntary confinement in a mental home, Anthony (Luke Wilson) joins his friends Dignan (the film's co-writer, Owen Wilson) and Bob (Robert Musgrave) in a bookstore heist. In need of direction, more so than money, the three guys prove to be polite, but rather inept criminals. Nevertheless the job is a success, and the trio head out to a remote hotel, planning to lay low until they can return to join a gang of supposed professional criminals lead by the infamous Mr. Henry (James Caan). Based on their own 1994 black-and-white short, the expanded film is part buddy movie, crime caper, and slacker comedy. First-time director Wes Anderson displays a sure hand, creating carefully composed scenes full of rich detail (shot on 27mm film, to ensure greater depth of field), schematic use of colour, and amusing, irreverent music (including a score by Mark Mothersbaugh, founding member of the punk band Devo). Full of sure-footed performances, BOTTLE ROCKET is a charming meditation on friendship, love, and innocence, conveyed with great humour and refreshing goodwill.
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