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Ten Minutes Older: The Trumpet Poster

Ten Minutes Older: The Trumpet

2002 | 92m | English

(3767 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

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Ten Minutes Older is a 2002 film project consisting of two compilation feature films entitled The Trumpet and The Cello. The project was conceived by the producer Nicolas McClintock as a reflection on the theme of time at the turn of the Millennium. Fifteen celebrated film-makers were invited to create their own vision of what time means in ten minutes of film.
Release Date: May 18, 2002
Director: Víctor Erice, Werner Herzog, Jim Jarmusch, Spike Lee, Wim Wenders, Chen Kaige, Aki Kaurismäki
Writer: Víctor Erice, Werner Herzog, Jim Jarmusch, Wim Wenders, Aki Kaurismäki
Genres: Drama, Documentary
Keywords
Production Companies JVC, Atom Films
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 26, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Markku Peltola (segment "Dogs Have No Hell")
Kati Outinen (segment "Dogs Have No Hell")
Marko Haavisto (segment "Dogs Have No Hell")
Ana Sofia Liaño (segment "Lifeline")
Chloë Sevigny (segment "Int. Trailer Night")
Charles Esten Bill (segment "Twelve Miles to Trona")
Amber Tamblyn Bill (segment "Twelve Miles to Trona")
Feng Yuanzheng (segment "100 Flowers Hidden Deep")
Wim Wenders Doctor #1 (segment "Twelve Miles to Trona")
Name Job
Víctor Erice Writer, Director
Werner Herzog Writer, Director
Jim Jarmusch Writer, Director
Spike Lee Director
Wim Wenders Writer, Director
Barry Alexander Brown Editor
Mathilde Bonnefoy Editor
Fang Li Editor
Frederick Elmes Director of Photography
Timo Salminen Director of Photography
Phedon Papamichael Director of Photography
Chen Kaige Director
Aki Kaurismäki Writer, Director, Editor
Joe Bini Editor
Javier Mampaso Art Direction
Paul Englishby Original Music Composer
Julia Juaniz Editor
Jay Rabinowitz Editor
Cao Juiping Production Design
Ángel Luis Fernández Director of Photography
Christopher Norr Director of Photography
Olli Varja Director of Photography
Vicente Ríos Director of Photography
Yang Shu Director of Photography
Name Title
Spike Lee Producer
Aki Kaurismäki Producer
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

CRCulver
5.0

<i>Ten Minutes Older</i> “The Trumpet” is a compilation of seven ten-minute films by various noted directors that all deal with the passing of time. This is one of such two 2002 projects produced by Nicholas McClintock, the other is subtitled "The Cello". In Aki Kaurismäki's "Dogs Have No Hell", ... Markku Peltola is released from jail and has ten minutes to convince Kati Outinen to marry him and board a train to Siberia. There's little explanation of who these people are, why Peltola was in jail or why they must go to Siberia, but the film does compress the Finnish director's style into a short span with its deadpan humour, stony facial expressions and even a performance by a morose rock band. As Víctor Erice's "Lifeline" begins, a baby's swaddling clothes are stained with blood because of a rupture. The film tracks the suspenseful minutes between the accident and the time that the large household discovers it and saves the child. The film is set in a Spanish village in 1940 and the silence (there's only a couple of lines of dialogue at the end) and clockwork-like buzz of rural life (reaping grain, sewing with a machine) make a real impression over the other films here. The main character of Jim Jarmusch's "Int. Trailer Night" is an actress (Chloe Sevigny) on a ten-minute break in her trailer while shooting a film. Though these ten minutes are all the time she gets to herself the whole day, her break is constantly interrupted by costume and mic checks and ultimately her dinner is delivered too late for her to eat it. Jarmusch is apparently showing us that a star's life is not an easy one, though considering the enormous salaries that these professionals command, it's hard to really sympathize. Wim Wender's "Ten Minutes to Trona" depicts an American businessman's desperate attempt to reach a hospital after unknowingly ingesting a plate of cookies dosed with some kind of hallucinogen. As he speeds down a desert road, various camera effects represent his warped perceptions, which range from horrible visions to moments of idyllic beauty. There's such a realism to this that one wonders if it is based on a personal experience by Wenders. Werner Herzog and Spike Lee chose to make short documentaries. Herzog's "Ten Thousand Years Older" visits a Amazonian tribe that had been contacted by the outside world in 1981 (thus being pulled millennia into the future in the blink of an eye). The first portion of the film consists of footage from the 1981 contact. In the years since, much of the tribe had been decimated by diseases to which they had no resistance, but Herzog captures an interview with two of the men two decades on. Spike Lee's contribution "We Wuz Robbed" deals with the 2000 presidential election and Al Gore's loss to George Bush in Florida. Lee interviews Democrat strategists about the agonizing wait for the figures to come in. As outraged as I was at the outcome of this election, I find this film to have little to no redeeming value and regularly skip it on rewatchings. Finally, Chen Kaige's "100 Flowers Hidden Deep" deals with the Chinese state's destruction of Beijing's traditional neighbourhoods in order to build skyscapers. A middle-aged Beijing man asks a removals team to help him take his things from his old home to his newly built highrise. When they arrive, they find only a vacant lot and it turns out the local man is quite mad. Through a computer-graphics overlay, Chen shows us what lovely buildings and streets were in this empty plot of land before the authorities demolished it all. In spite of the talent enlisted for this project, the films here are generally not very deep. I would say that only the Herzog, Erice and Chen films are memorable, but it's hard to be enthusiastic even about these. I think it would appeal mainly to completists of one or more of the directors represented here, but it's hard to recommend it to more casual fans.

Jun 23, 2021