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The Man from Elysian Fields (2001)
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Overview
Tagline:
Pleasure is his business...Call him old-fashioned.Plot:
A failed novelist's inability to pay the bills strains relations with his wife and leads him to work at an escort service where he becomes entwined with a wealthy woman whose husband is a successful writer. full summary | add synopsisNewsDesk:
(2 articles)
Traveling 6,000 Miles For Dinner (From Studio Briefing. 1 October 2002)
Stars Shocked By Hollywood Truths (From WENN. 7 March 2001)
User Comments:
Intriguing film moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Andy Garcia | ... | Byron | |
| Mick Jagger | ... | Luther | |
| Julianna Margulies | ... | Dena | |
| Olivia Williams | ... | Andrea | |
| James Coburn | ... | Alcott | |
| Michael Des Barres | ... | Nigel | |
| Richard Bradford | ... | Edward Rodgers | |
| Anjelica Huston | ... | Jennifer Adler | |
| Xander Berkeley | ... | Virgil Koster | |
| Sherman Howard | ... | Paul Pearson | |
| Joe Santos | ... | Domenico | |
| Susan Barnes | ... | Attractive Woman | |
| Tracey Walter | ... | Bartender | |
| Asha Siewkumar | ... | Receptionist | |
| Kerry Li | ... | Restaurant Patron |
Additional Details
MPAA:
Rated R for language and sexual content.Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
106 min | Germany:97 min (TV version)Country:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
ColorAspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 moreSound Mix:
Dolby DigitalCertification:
Finland:K-11 | Netherlands:6 | Iceland:L | Argentina:13 | Australia:M | Germany:12 | New Zealand:M | Singapore:NC-16 | USA:R (certificate #38183)MOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
The credit card that Luther Fox uses to pay for taking Jennifer Adler out was George Hickenlooper's own debit card. You can read his name on screen (he has since cancelled the card). moreGoofs:
At the book signing near the end of the film, Byron signs the name "Georgette" in the book for the woman named Yasmine. The next woman in line reveals her name to be Georgette. moreQuotes:
Luther Fox: I don't know why they call them outstanding checks... as if not being paid is somehow a good thing. moreFAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more
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Discuss this title with other users on IMDb message board for The Man from Elysian Fields (2001)| Recent Posts (updated daily) | User |
|---|---|
| Great film...overlooked!! !! | ericsinla |
| Maupassant | elena-lanz |
| Maureen McCormick in the film??? | Menzoberranzan |
| character actress? | jconnery |
| unknown song | bspupson |
| Unknown song. | ron_fq |
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"The Man from Elysian Fields" is a writer's film filled with sensuality, failure, loss, hope, infidelity, intrigue and deception with a touch of film noir. Byron Tiller (Andy Garcia) plays the starving artist with an early success that brought neither fortune nor lasting notoriety who is ready to compromise his ideals for grocery money. Luther Fox (Mick Jagger) has set up a deceptively unobtrusive escort service across the hall. Luther draws Byron into a discussion about life and winds up with a recruit for his high-class service. But writers need broad experience and this opportunity is too tempting for Tilly to pass up. He's entirely too reluctant which makes him ripe for the picking.
And he's just the candidate for the wife of a prominent author. This multiple Pulitzer Prize winning novelist, Tobias Alcott played by James Coburn, is losing his muse and his health, but his powers of deception are as sharp as ever. His wife, played by the icy Olivia Williams, draws Tilly into the family with several offers he can't refuse. Andy Garcia nails the struggling writer's persona begging our sympathy while he spirals down the hierarchy of alternatives to keep the wolf from the door. Mick Jagger is perfect for the part of the Faustian lizard who's tiring of the game he's mastered. The role of the escort, his office facade and ultimately his own personal relationship crumbles under the weight of deception.
Tilly is seduced by the temptations of a shrewd couple (the Alcott's) whose too-good-to-be-true offer leaves him with a great story and perhaps a Pulitzer of his own. But he's got to write it. There's always a catch.
The Hollywood ending, so clearly the decision of a focus group isn't a worthy conclusion to this story. This is another film with talented actors, superior cinematography and an intriguing story but lacking direction. Recent films like "Posession" come to mind. The product is compromised when the director lacks the courage to bring the film to a meaningful - in this case a disturbing - conclusion rather than one that's "satisfying," Tilly's editor spoke to this issue when he rejected his second novel saying that the reader doesn't want to think microcosm when she's sitting on the bus... In trying to please the mainstream, reach a wider audience and improve the box office, we lose opportunities to excel.
So what else is new in Hollywood?