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20,000 Days on Earth Poster

20,000 Days on Earth

2014 | 97m | English

(12251 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Details

A semi-fictionalized documentary about a day in the life of Australian musician Nick Cave's persona.
Release Date: Jul 05, 2014
Director: Iain Forsyth, Jane Pollard
Writer: Iain Forsyth, Nick Cave, Jane Pollard
Genres: Drama, Music, Documentary
Keywords docudrama, woman director, part fiction
Production Companies Film4 Productions, BFI, Corniche Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Nick Cave Self
Warren Ellis Self
Blixa Bargeld Self
Susie Bick Self
Arthur Cave Self
Earl Cave Self
Kirk Lake Archivist
Darian Leader Self
Kylie Minogue Self
Ray Winstone Self
Name Job
Iain Forsyth Director, Writer
Nick Cave Music, Writer
Warren Ellis Music
Jonathan Amos Editor
Chloë Thomson Camera Operator
Jane Pollard Director, Writer
Martina Luisetti Makeup Artist
Ole Bratt Birkeland Camera Operator
Robbie Bryant Second Assistant "B" Camera
Emil Davidov First Assistant Camera
Kevin Foy Key Grip
Adam Ings Digital Imaging Technician
Jason Oxley Focus Puller
Trevor Speed Focus Puller
Romek Sudak Digital Imaging Technician
Amelia Troubridge Still Photographer
Erik Wilson Director of Photography
Dan Bowring First Assistant Camera
Claudio Cadman Assistant Camera
Sally Eccleston First Assistant Camera
Andy Hill Focus Puller
Jonny Lewis Camera Trainee
Iwan Prys Reynolds First Assistant "A" Camera
Morgan Spencer Second Assistant Camera
Heikki Kossi Foley Artist
Name Title
Thomas Benski Executive Producer
Alex Dunnett Producer
Hani Farsi Executive Producer
Dan Bowen Producer
James Wilson Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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2024 5 11 16 7
2024 6 10 20 5
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2024 8 9 12 6
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2025 2 7 11 3
2025 3 6 10 2
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2025 8 0 1 0
2025 9 0 1 0
2025 10 1 1 1

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Reviews

furious_iz
8.0

Simultaneously one of the most pretentious and brilliant things I have ever seen. If you love Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, you will love this. If you find his music dark and too much hard work, stay away. 8/10 ...

Jun 23, 2021
tmdb28039023
6.0

I wouldn’t hesitate to call Nick Cave a genius, especially not after watching 20,000 Days on Earth – and yet, the beauty of this biofictional film, co-written by Cave with directors Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard, is its humility. Most movies about musicians, particularly rockstars, suffer from what ... we might call The Amadeus Syndrome; in contrast, 20,000 Days is a refreshing reminder that you must let inspiration find you working – and by ‘you’ I mean anyone; if Cave himself is a genius, it's not because all his ideas are right, but because he has the right idea about all ideas: “We cannot afford to be idle. To act on a bad idea is better than to not act at all, because the worth of the idea never becomes apparent until you do it. Sometimes this idea can be the smallest thing in the world, a little flame that you hunch over and cup with your hand and pray will not be extinguished by all the storm that howls about it. If you can hold on to that flame, great things can be constructed around it that are massive and powerful and world-changing... all held up by the tiniest of ideas”. This certainly is a film about the thought as well as the deed. We see Cave and the Bad Seeds working in the studio and performing onstage, but the movie reaches farther back, to the genesis of a song and even what lies before that – the ‘pre-song,’ if you will. We learn that everything – including “every secret, sacred moment that exists between a husband and a wife” – may be “cannibalized and ground up and spat out the other side in the form of a song, inflated and distorted and monstrous.” We learn also that songs are born from chaos (“Counterpoint is the key. Putting two disparate images beside each other and seeing which way the sparks fly”), “wild and unbroken,” and it’s the songwriter’s task to grab a hold of them in this protean state and not let go until they “become domesticated … something familiar and compliant.” This is no mean feat, considering that Cave’s songs aren’t your typical ‘verse-bridge-chorus’ compositions; “Higgs Boson Blues”, featured in the film, is an outstanding example of a stream of consciousness-type song whose greatest strength is its apparent spontaneity – and indeed, if Cave wasn’t reading the lyrics off a notebook as he sings them, we might be tricked into believing he’s improvising them right there on the spot. The movie as a whole is deceivingly effortless – one of those small ideas around which something great has been constructed.

Sep 03, 2022