You are on page 1of 5

7/19/2019 Paterson Movie Review & Film Summary (2016) | Roger Ebert

In Memoriam 1942 – 2013 | ★ ★ ★ ★

PATERSON

★★★★ | Glenn Kenny

December 27, 2016 | ☄ 44

The new movie written and directed by Jim Jarmusch is a total fantasy. This in spite of being shot on the streets of
the New Jersey city in which it is set, and for which the movie itself and its lead character are named. It’s as much of
a fantasy as Jean Cocteau’s “Orpheus,” another great film about a poet that was at least partially set in the “real”
contemporary world. It’s maybe not as much of a fantasy as the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy.
The movie’s protagonist, played with spectacular attention to detail and what feels like a genuine sense of affinity by
Adam Driver, is named Paterson, and he drives a New Jersey Transit bus around the New Jersey city of Paterson,
where he also lives. Paterson, New Jersey was once an industrial center of the United States—a storied
manufacturer of silks and textiles—that fell into a kind of ruin by the time this film reviewer moved there, to live, in
1978. It has undergone several not-quite-revivals since that time. Its main fame today is in its being the ostensible
subject of an epic modernist American poem by William Carlos Williams, who lived in nearby Rutherford. “[A]nd so
to man/to Paterson,” Williams wrote in the Preface to that work, underlining an ambition that was potentially
pantheistic.
A D V E RT I S E M E N T

The Paterson inhabited by Paterson is not a ruin but it is a largely quiet, sometimes haunted-seeming place.
Paterson the man (whose first name is not given, or is perhaps nonexistent) is a fellow of routine. For the most part
he gets up at the same early hour every morning, summoned by what his wife Laura calls his “silent alarm watch,” a
Casio of retro design. Paterson’s marriage is also a little retro (some critics have derided it as retrograde, politically,
a claim I find not pertinent). Laura, played by Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani (who’s in Kiarostami’s “Shirin”
and Farhadi’s “About Elly”) is more or less a housewife. She bakes delicious cupcakes, dubious dinner pies, is
unfailingly sweet, and decorates the couple’s small house with bold black and white patterns, which also distinguish
her cupcakes. She has some whimsical seeming ambitions that Paterson either indulges or helps her with,
depending on how you want to look at it. But aside from muse functions, she has little to do with her husband’s daily
routine, which, aside from driving a bus, is devoted to poetry. In his neat notebook Paterson writes, in a neat hand,
plain-spoken poems celebrating what the Surrealists called “the marvelous in the everyday.” These poems were
actually written by Ron Padgett, a still-living poet with roots in the “New York School” which of course was
influenced by Allen Ginsberg and his mentor Williams and whose most famous member was Frank O’Hara.

https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/paterson-2016 1/5
7/19/2019 Paterson Movie Review & Film Summary (2016) | Roger Ebert

The plain-spoken poems here bear a slight resemblance to the work of James Schuyler, only minus Schuyler’s
anxieties and tortured longings—they seem to come from a place of contemplative contentment. Paterson’s nearly
rigid approach to life, love and work, seems deliberately designed to produce that state of being. His other muse is,
of course, the Paterson Falls, where he sits on his lunch hour and at other times.
His nemesis is an English bulldog named Marvin, who belongs to the couple but is clearly not crazy about Paterson.
Every night, though, Paterson walks the growling, grumbling beast, and leashes him outside a bar. There, Paterson
has precisely one beer and talks things over with bartender Doc (Barry Shabaka Henley), discussing Doc’s Paterson
Wall of Fame (featuring Lou Costello, Floyd and Jimmy Vivino, and others) and contemplating life and love.
Paterson gets food for thought on his bus, too; he overhears a teenage girl explaining Italian anarchist Gaetano
Bresci to a fellow student, say, or two construction works discussing (in incredibly polite terms) their potential
amorous conquests, which they say they’re too tired or preoccupied to follow through on.
This is the third of Jarmusch’s fictional films in which he concocts a fantasy realm in which he, the image-maker
and aesthete, could lead a comfortable and productive existence. In 2009’s “The Limits of Control” he posited the
imaginative realm as one in which an individual could not just escape political oppression but also effectively
obliterate it. In 2013’s “Only Lovers Left Alive” he explored the state of vampirism as a way of building a realm in
which one could stay not just forever young but forever young with fantastic taste. Here he constructs an idyll out of
orderliness and a circumscribed mode of engagement. Paterson and Laura have no onscreen social life to speak of
(the bake sale for which Laura creates dozens of delicious looking black and white cupcakes is not depicted), and no
nosy or imposing family members. Paterson has not published his work, and does not even deign to copy it out of
his notebook. And yet there’s a sense of interdependent gears at work here. The man, the bus, the passengers, the
bar patrons, all pouring into the poetry.
A D V E RT I S E M E N T

But if the movie were merely an exercise in Jarmusch’s fancy, it would be a pleasurable thing. It is a meticulously
composed movie, shot beautifully by Frederick Elmes; every frame is a beauty. “Paterson” is ultimately more than a
whim. It is a movie that actually grows more enigmatic on a second viewing. Asked at one point why he doesn’t
carry a smart phone, Paterson responds that it would feel like a leash. And yet he hardly seems a person who would
stray. At one point in the movie, Paterson, who maintains a stoic countenance in most circumstances, is forced to
intervene before an act of violence is committed. His bearing in the aftermath is odd; he laughs, with a kind of
horror. His calm surface disturbed, he reveals he’s fighting something within himself in order to maintain his
equanimity. After that, we are shown a photograph of Paterson bearing military medals (the shot is a real picture of
Driver during his time in the Marines). The film feels like one in which nothing is happening, but it’s not happening
beautifully, and then there finally is a galvanic event that’s both heartbreaking and comical. And what happens after
that is moving, and instructive. “I breathe poetry,” a character Paterson meets at the end of the film says to him as
they both sit and look at the falls. That is ultimately the very real thing that the movie is about: the conviction that if
you can live at least part of your life breathing poetry (and that poetry is not necessarily a verbal thing), you can
make your life more worthwhile.

https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/paterson-2016 2/5
7/19/2019 Paterson Movie Review & Film Summary (2016) | Roger Ebert

Around The Web

(http://www.zergnet.com/i/4245953/42988/0/0/0/1) (http://www.zergnet.com/i/4101515/42988/0/0/0/2)
Winona Ryder Is Not Letting Anyone The Tragic Life of Mark Ruffalo
Forget She's Married to Keanu (http://www.zergnet.com/i/4101515/42
(http://www.zergnet.com/i/4245953/4 988/0/0/0/2)
2988/0/0/0/1)

(http://www.zergnet.com/i/4240439/42988/0/0/0/3) (http://www.zergnet.com/i/4305681/42988/0/0/0/4)
We Now Understand Why Sean Why Billy Hargrove from 'Stranger
Connery Has Disappeared Things' Looks So Familiar
(http://www.zergnet.com/i/4240439/4 (http://www.zergnet.com/i/4305681/4
2988/0/0/0/3) 2988/0/0/0/4)

https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/paterson-2016 3/5
7/19/2019 Paterson Movie Review & Film Summary (2016) | Roger Ebert

(http://www.zergnet.com/i/4139097/42988/0/0/0/5) (http://www.zergnet.com/i/4309289/42988/0/0/0/6
)
Love Scenes That Got Way Too Steamy
For Comfort The Absolute Best Horror Film That
(http://www.zergnet.com/i/4139097/4 Has Come Out of This Century
2988/0/0/0/5) (http://www.zergnet.com/i/4309289/4
2988/0/0/0/6)

POPULAR BLOG POSTS


The Unloved, Part 67: Mortal Engines Scout Tafoya Stranger Things Returns with Phenomenally
A video essay about Mortal Engines, as part of Scout Tafoya's
Entertaining Third Season Brian Tallerico
ongoing video essay series on maligned masterpieces. This is the most purely entertaining season of Stranger Things to
date.

From Blue Velvet to Top Gun: J. Hoberman on Movie


Culture in the Reagan Era Patrick Z. McGavin
An interview with the legendary critic J. Hoberman on the release of
his book Make My Day.

POPULAR REVIEWS

Midsommar Stuber

https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/paterson-2016 4/5
7/19/2019 Paterson Movie Review & Film Summary (2016) | Roger Ebert

Dark Phoenix Yesterday ★★★★ ★★


★☇ ★★☇

PATERSON (2016)
Cast
Adam Driver as Paterson , Golshifteh Farahani as Laura , Barry Shabaka
Henley as Doc ,
Director
Jim Jarmusch,
Writer
Jim Jarmusch,
Cinematographer
Frederick Elmes,
Editor
Affonso Gonçalves,
Composer
Jim Jarmusch, Carter Logan, Sqürl,
Comedy, Drama
Rated R for some language.
118 minutes

https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/paterson-2016 5/5

You might also like