0
Skip to Content
Cinefile - Film Reviews
Reviews
Blog
Publications
About
Contact
Cinefile - Film Reviews
Reviews
Blog
Publications
About
Contact
Reviews
Blog
Publications
About
Contact
T Trouble in Mind (1986)
Trouble-in-Mind-4400.jpg Image 1 of
Trouble-in-Mind-4400.jpg
Trouble-in-Mind-4400.jpg

Trouble in Mind (1986)

£0.00


Country: US
Technical: col 111m
Director: Alan Rudolph
Cast: Kris Kristofferson, Keith Carradine, Lori Singer, Divine, Geneviève Bujold, Joe Morton

Synopsis:

An ex-con arrives in town and crosses paths with a young couple on the make and a coffee shop owner.

Review:

Unusual, phantasmagorical mixture of old and modern, with Kristofferson as Bogie, Carradine as Widmark, Divine as Greenstreet, etc. Its camp miserabilism and slick dialogue will not be to everyone's taste, but it showed that affectionate (rather than parodic) homage and artistic pretension were not an entirely lost cause in 80s America.

Add To Cart


Country: US
Technical: col 111m
Director: Alan Rudolph
Cast: Kris Kristofferson, Keith Carradine, Lori Singer, Divine, Geneviève Bujold, Joe Morton

Synopsis:

An ex-con arrives in town and crosses paths with a young couple on the make and a coffee shop owner.

Review:

Unusual, phantasmagorical mixture of old and modern, with Kristofferson as Bogie, Carradine as Widmark, Divine as Greenstreet, etc. Its camp miserabilism and slick dialogue will not be to everyone's taste, but it showed that affectionate (rather than parodic) homage and artistic pretension were not an entirely lost cause in 80s America.


Country: US
Technical: col 111m
Director: Alan Rudolph
Cast: Kris Kristofferson, Keith Carradine, Lori Singer, Divine, Geneviève Bujold, Joe Morton

Synopsis:

An ex-con arrives in town and crosses paths with a young couple on the make and a coffee shop owner.

Review:

Unusual, phantasmagorical mixture of old and modern, with Kristofferson as Bogie, Carradine as Widmark, Divine as Greenstreet, etc. Its camp miserabilism and slick dialogue will not be to everyone's taste, but it showed that affectionate (rather than parodic) homage and artistic pretension were not an entirely lost cause in 80s America.

Copyright © 2012-2023, David Clare. All rights reserved.