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Dead Man

It is preferable not to travel with a dead man.
1995 | 121m | English

(107312 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Director: Jim Jarmusch
Writer: Jim Jarmusch
Staring:
Details

William Blake, an accountant turned fugitive, is on the run. During his travels, he meets a Native American man called Nobody, who guides him on a journey to the spiritual world.
Release Date: Dec 23, 1995
Director: Jim Jarmusch
Writer: Jim Jarmusch
Genres: Fantasy, Drama, Western
Keywords sheriff, bounty hunter, gun, indigenous, attempted murder, prosecution, dying and death, frontier, murder, black and white, 19th century, fear of dying, wanted dead or alive
Production Companies Pandora Film, JVC, Newmarket Capital Group, 12-Gauge Productions
Box Office Revenue: $1,038,000
Budget: $9,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Johnny Depp William Blake
Gary Farmer Nobody
Crispin Glover Train Fireman
Lance Henriksen Cole Wilson
Michael Wincott Conway Twill
Eugene Byrd Johnny 'The Kid' Pickett
John Hurt John Scholfield
Robert Mitchum John Dickinson
Iggy Pop Salvatore 'Sally' Jenko
Gabriel Byrne Charlie Dickinson
Jared Harris Benmont Tench
Mili Avital Thel Russell
Jimmie Ray Weeks Marvin, Older Marshal
Mark Bringelson Lee, Younger Marshal
John North Mr. Olafsen
Alfred Molina Trading Post Missionary
Billy Bob Thornton Big George Drakoulious
Michelle Thrush Nobody's Girlfriend
Steve Buscemi Bartender
Gibby Haynes Man with Gun in Alley
Richard Boes Man with Wrench
Name Job
Dayna Lee Set Decoration
Jay Rabinowitz Editor
Laura Rosenthal Casting
Lou Carlucci Special Effects Coordinator
Randall Balsmeyer Visual Effects Supervisor
Al Jones Stunt Coordinator
Jon Farhat Visual Effects Supervisor
Bob Ziembicki Production Design
Robert Hein Supervising Sound Editor
Magdaline Volaitis Sound Effects Editor
Ellen Lewis Casting
Ted Berner Art Direction
Eugene Gearty Sound Effects Editor
Drew Kunin Sound Mixer
Patty York Makeup Artist
Richard Alonzo Prosthetic Makeup Artist
Clare M. Corsick Hairstylist
David Dupuis Prosthetics
Scott W. Farley Key Hair Stylist
Tom Irvin Special Effects Makeup Artist
Todd Kleitsch Assistant Makeup Artist
Leon Laderach Prosthetics
Neal Martz Key Makeup Artist
Beth DePatie Production Manager
Jude Gorjanc Second Assistant Director
Constance L. Hoy Second Second Assistant Director
Todd Pfeiffer First Assistant Director
Cheyenne Ali Scenic Artist
Arthur Allyn Construction Foreman
Mark Balda Carpenter
Elizabeth A. Beckman Art Department Coordinator
Michael Bennett Greensman
Michael Blair Carpenter
Mark Borg Carpenter
Karen M. Clark Swing
Edie Douglass Assistant Property Master
George A. Fleming Scenic Artist
John A. Foote Swing
Tony Gibson Swing
Bill Holmquist Construction Coordinator
Kevin Hughes On Set Dresser
Terry Kempf Head Carpenter
Richard Lambert Leadman
Suzanne Lapick Assistant Property Master
Walt Mikolwski Carpenter
Craig Anthony Muzio Scenic Artist
Jack Orlando Carpenter
John Pattison Property Master
Kenneth Stellar Greensman
James Stephenson Carpenter
Kenneth Sylvester Scenic Artist
Mae Brunken Set Designer
Shari Hilliard Art Department Production Assistant
Brick Mason Storyboard Artist
Stephen M. Vernarelli Set Designer
Coll Anderson Sound Recordist
Kam Chan Foley Editor
Héctor Cordero Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Marko Costanzo Foley Artist
Keith Culbertson Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Dan Evans Farkas Assistant Sound Editor
Mark Goodermote Boom Operator
Hextro Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Frank Kern Foley Editor
Julie Lindner Assistant Sound Editor
Kimberly R. McCord-Wilson Apprentice Sound Editor
Sylvia Menno Dialogue Editor
Bruce Pross Foley Supervisor
Stacey Tanner Sound Recordist
John C. Carlucci Special Effects Assistant
Joe Fordham Special Effects Coordinator
Mark Habegger Special Effects Manager
Nori Honda Special Effects Makeup Artist
Joe Garert Compositing Artist
Anne Putnam Kolbe Visual Effects Coordinator
Daniel Leung Digital Compositor
Steven T Puri Visual Effects Producer
Ken Smith Compositing Artist
Mimi Abers Digital Compositor
Marc Rubone Rotoscoping Artist, Animation
Tori Bridges Stunts
James Brisbin Electrician
Eric Budlong Grip
Kenny Davis Dolly Grip
Robert K. Feldmann Key Grip
Lisa K. Ferguson Second Assistant Camera
Kirk R. Gardner Steadicam Operator
Bob Gorelick Steadicam Operator
Todd Heater Electrician
Jon Hokanson Electrician
Chris Lombardi Second Unit Director of Photography
David Luckenbach Steadicam Operator
Jeff Mart Steadicam Operator
Byron McCulloch Best Boy Grip
Michael Palmer Best Boy Electric
Christine Parry Still Photographer
Tony J. Pirri Grip
Christopher Porter Gaffer
Bobby L. Smith Grip
Pim Tjujerman First Assistant Camera
Jim Jarmusch Director, Screenplay
Neil Young Original Music Composer
Robby Müller Director of Photography
Marit Allen Costume Design
Erik Stabenau Stunts
Joel Harlow Special Effects Makeup Artist
Christopher Allen Nelson Special Effects Makeup Artist
Mark DeSimone ADR Mixer
Name Title
Demetra J. MacBride Producer
Karen Koch Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 22 41 13
2024 5 24 44 15
2024 6 25 42 14
2024 7 23 34 16
2024 8 15 23 11
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2025 1 16 35 9
2025 2 11 23 3
2025 3 5 14 1
2025 4 3 6 1
2025 5 3 7 1
2025 6 2 5 1
2025 7 2 4 1
2025 8 2 3 1
2025 9 3 5 1
2025 10 2 2 2

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Reviews

FilipeManuelNeto
6.0

**A somewhat surrealist film, which has value, but which is not for everyone's taste.** This film is a little disconcerting. It is an uncompromising Western, frontal, very raw and sometimes difficult to understand. It all starts with William Blake, an accountant from the East Coast, taking a trai ... n to a remote place in the West, to accept a job in the company of an unscrupulous industrialist. It turns out that the vacancy was filled by someone else: at the end of the day, unmotivated, he goes to bed with a prostitute and ends up killing a man who tried to kill her out of jealousy. This man was the son of the factory owner, who sends henchmen after Blake, who is unaware of this and runs away, ending up in the company of a strange Indian named Nobody. The film has great artistic note. It has excellent black and white cinematography, makes intelligent use of light, shadow, angles and filming framing. The sets and costumes are very good: they are not particularly rigorous from a historical point of view, the film was not concerned with being strictly framed in time and space, so that aesthetics prevails over the realism of the recreation. However, the aesthetic value is remarkable, and it gives us a raw, rough and dirty vision of the West. Jim Jarmusch ensures effective management that makes the most of what's in its hands. There are a good number of visual effects and the soundtrack, based on the electric guitar, is atmospheric and somehow fits into the film effectively, even if it is never one of the soundtracks that we will want to have on CD. The film has a series of good actors, of which Johnny Depp stands out in an almost natural way. He was still young here, but he already showed his taste for playing the most bizarre characters. However, and perhaps because of the bizarre nature of the film itself, it is not one of the actor's greatest works. Iggy Pop, Robert Mitchum and Crispen Glover are also here, and they do an interesting and sincere job, in rough, tough characters, with few lines and a lot of presence and impact. The big problem with the film – and it really is a big one – is that it is so apparently complex and almost surreal. At various times it is suggested that the character played by Depp is a man who is already dead, and there is almost a synesthesia between the accountant and his British namesake, who was an artist and poet and who would be, at the time of the events of the film, really dead! It's very strange, and such strangeness makes this not a film for everyone's taste.

Jul 04, 2023