Dead Leaves (1998) Poster

(1998)

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8/10
Haunting, poetic film
Falconeer13 September 2015
Super low-budget film manages to capture some truly gorgeous images, while telling a sad & romantic tale. "Dead Leaves" is a road movie, that begins in Brooklyn NY, when a man finds his girlfriend dead, in their apartment. Joey is not ready to say goodbye to Laura and, overcome with grief, he puts her body in the passenger seat of his beat up Porsche, and hits the road. What follows is an atmospheric, richly-filmed trip along the East Coast of the USA. For such a low budget film, this one manages to capture some of the most beautiful Autumn scenery I have seen. Brightly colored, dying leaves, glowing neon signs of cheap, decaying roadside motels, shots of tiny, obscure villages and towns, are captured in this indescribably nostalgic way. I'm guessing that the grainy film stock helped to give the movie this ethereal glow, but it also can be attributed to the smart choice of location shooting.

I see the only other review for this film was written by someone who stumbled on it accidentally, while looking for some exploitation film called "Nekromantik." Well it's no surprise that he didn't enjoy this slow-moving, poetic film. There is no necrophilia here, and almost no bloodshed. In fact we don't have any exploitative elements at all; just a dark, almost Gothic tale of lost love. And the main theme here is, as the title suggests, decay. Everything is decaying; the foliage, the buildings, the cars, and Joe's physical and mental health, along with Laura's body. And throughout we hear narration of some classic poetry, along with some haunting pieces from Bach and Wagner. "Dead Leaves" reminds me very much of the film "Brown Bunny" from Vincent Gallo, another film that was underrated, and greatly misunderstood. It also brings to mind the early works of Gus van Sant, especially in it's visual style. Highly recommended for fans of independent and obscure films, looking for something different. Watching "Dead Leaves," I had to wonder if the East Coast was really that beautiful back in 1998.
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4/10
I Don't Know About This One...
CMRKeyboadist17 May 2006
I happened to find this movie by accident doing a search on the German shocker "Nekromantik" on ebay. The storyline sounded interesting enough with elements of "Nekromantik" and "Buio Omega" and other sick, twisted films. As far as I am concerned, this movie was boring, zero atmosphere, decent acting, and way to artsy.

The story starts with the two lead characters (Joey and Laura) walking through a forest with a narration of Edgar Allen Poe's Annabelle Lee. The next scene we see Laura in her apartment take a stumble and dies after hitting her head (I am guessing since it is all off scene). When Joey discovers her it is all to much to take and he goes on a rode trip with her corpse, staying at random motels. There are many times where he is hallucinating and thinking about the past and all this leads up to is his imminent self destruction.

The movie plays very slowly and is only a 70 minute film. Nonetheless, it feels like 2 hours. The story goes nowhere and leads up to a conclusion that I could have guessed even before the opening credits rolled through. The acting was decent, but the actors weren't given many lines to work with. The music was sometimes good with opera here and there but then they would through in some terrible alternative rock music that just makes you want to gag and takes away from the movie. The one thing the movie had going for it was all the poetic narration. It added something original to the movie, but other than that, very disappointing. 4/10
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