Showing posts with label Black Limousine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Limousine. Show all posts


Certain movies start out promising and get better. Others, well,...don't. Black Limousine starts out very promising: a recovering alcoholic, some nighttime limo driving and a jazzy score to bring all the smoky goodness together. Unfortunately, this movie takes a bizarre turn for the worse. David Arquette deserves better.

Starring in Black Limousine, he portrays Jack MacKenzie, an alcoholic Hollywood composer who had it all: dream job, beautiful wife and daughter. He loses his cushy job writing film scores and his wife divorces him after a tragic DUI accident. In order to provide for his ex-wife and daughter, Jack talks his way into a job at a limo service driving for the same people he previously worked with. One of his fellow drivers, Hitch (David Jean Thomas), tells him the grisly history of the limo he gets to drive: the previous driver killed his wife in the backseat. Despite this knowledge, he accepts the job, and the limo, and gets to work.

One night after driving for a raucous goth band, Jack heads to an AA meeting, where he meets Erica (Bijou Phillips), a fellow alcoholic and struggling actress. He tries to befriend her by telling her how much he likes her latest vodka billboard, and she mistakes him for an overeager fan and wants nothing to do with him. Eventually she warms up to Jack and tells him she's three car payments away from losing everything. They commiserate over coffee.

Jack soon lands a gig driving a successful Australian actor named Thomas Bower (Nicholas Bishop) to and from a movie set. During one of their drives, Jack tells Thomas that he was once a Hollywood composer and Thomas promises to introduce him to the right and influential people so Jack can get back on his feet. Jack is elated.

At the movie set he encounters Erica, who has a part in the film as a princess and here's where Black Limousine gets weird. Jack and Erica sit in a spaceship prop and imagine themselves floating through space as they watch a video screen. They dance, have fun and goof around on the set and all this is set to some slow, disjointed, cheesy special effects and music right out of a bad 1980's science fiction movie. Things went downhill from here.

From this point on, the film is interspersed with strange, trippy music videos and it becomes hard to discern what is reality and what is Jack's fantasy. Vivica A. Fox shows up in a brief cameo highlight as a producer who asks Jack to give a script to Thomas Bower and Jack agrees but only in exchange for a chance to compose the film. When Thomas gets the script, he feels like Jack's meal-ticket and fires him. Jack finds out that Erica and Thomas may be having a fling and he gets angry and says things he quickly regrets. He goes back to his apartment to try to compose but his neighbors have made complaints about the noise and his landlady, played by Lin Shaye, demands rent. She also asks if he has found any parts for her since she is a struggling actress herself. This is Hollywood, after all.

Jack quickly falls into a downward spiral messing up on the job, with his ex-wife and her new husband, and the nightmare of the DUI and its tragic consequences come flooding back to him. It all culminates in a very scary ending that you're never really sure is Jack's reality or just all in his head.

This movie gave me the feeling that the filmmakers constantly changed their mind about what direction the film should take and what to leave on the cutting room floor. Part "Christine," part "Leaving Las Vegas" and a whole lot of confusing mess, Black Limousine doesn't really make a whole lot of sense and if Mr Arquette deserves better, we, as the audience, certainly do as well.

HaryScary

1 Remote out of 5

2012 Rated R 101 minutes


Anchor Bay Entertainment has send us over information and stills for the upcoming DVD release of "Black Limousine". The film features a top notch cast that includes David Arquette (Scream 4, “Dancing with the Stars”), Bijou Phillips (Almost Famous), Vivica A. Fox (Kill Bill Vol. 1), Nicholas Bishop (“Body of Proof”) and Lin Shaye (There’s Something About Mary). No special features have been announced at this time. "Black Limousine" hits DVD on July 10h.

Press Release:

Tinseltown isn’t always as bright as it may seem. Anchor Bay Entertainment is proud to announce the release of Black Limousine on DVD July 10, 2012. Directed by the founder of Cineville Carl Colpaert (G.I. Jesus), this surreal Hollywood story created a buzz on the film festival circuit, winning the audience award at the Santa Cruz Film Festival. Black Limousine is stylish and unique with a top-notch cast and memorable performances by David Arquette (Scream 4, “Dancing with the Stars”), Bijou Phillips (Almost Famous), Vivica A. Fox (Kill Bill Vol. 1), Nicholas Bishop (“Body of Proof”) and Lin Shaye (There’s Something About Mary).

Jack MacKenzie (Arquette), once a hot Hollywood composer, has fallen on hard times. Having resorted to taking a draining job as a limo driver just to make ends meet, he is a broken man, trying to put his life back together by picking up the pieces of a shattered family and career. Jack’s sprit and sanity have been crushed by the loss of his first daughter and he has turned to alcohol to deal with the grief.

Jack catches a break when he is assigned to drive A-List Actor Thomas Bower (Bishop) back-and-forth to the set of his latest film, during which time the two build a friendship of sorts. Bower remembers the score Jack had previously written for a science fiction epic, and appears interested and willing to help him get re-established. Jack also strikes up a sexually charged relationship with Erica Long (Phillips), a model and singer, who is struggling with demons of her own.

Battling his repressed memories, depression and addiction, Jack starts to lose control of the one thing he values most - his mind. He must now pull himself together before something goes horribly wrong. However, in the city of dreams…life isn’t always at it seems.

With powerful performances and thought-provoking themes, Black Limousine will bring to mind the recent critical hit Drive. Here is a beautiful and haunting examination of a man driven to the brink of madness, dreamlike and harrowing; Black Limousine is truly an unforgettable ride.