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    My Own Private Idaho [Criterion Collection] [Blu-ray]

    Director: Gus Van Sant Cast: River Phoenix

    River Phoenix
    , Keanu Reeves
    Keanu Reeves
    , James Russo
    James Russo
    , William Richert
    William Richert
    , Rodney Harvey
    Rodney Harvey


    Blu-ray

    (Wide Screen)

    $39.99
    $39.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • Release Date: 10/06/2015
    • UPC: 0715515158619
    • Original Release: 1991
    • Rating: R
    • Source: THE CRITERION COLLECTION, INC
    • Region Code: A
    • Presentation: [Wide Screen]
    • Sound: [Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround]
    • Language: English
    • Runtime: 6240
    • Sales rank: 8,198

    Special Features

    Illustrated 2005 audio conversation between Van Sant and filmmaker Todd Haynes; The making of "My Private Idaho," a 2005 documentary featuring cast and crew; Kings of the road, a 2005 interview with film scholar Paul Arthur on Van Sant's adaptation of Shakespeare's Henry IV and Orson Welles's Chimes at Midnight; Conversation from 2005 between writer JT LeRoy and filmmaker Jonathan Caouette; Deleted scenes; Trailer

    Cast & Crew

    Performance Credits
    River Phoenix Mike Waters
    Keanu Reeves Scott Favor
    James Russo Richard
    William Richert Bob
    Rodney Harvey Gary
    Chiara Caselli Carmella
    Michael Parker Digger
    Jessie Thomas Denise,Denise
    Flea Budd
    Grace Zabriskie Alena
    Tom Troupe Jack Favor
    Udo Kier Hans
    Sally Curtice Jane Lightwork
    Robert Lee Pitchlynn Walt
    Mickey Cottrell Daddy Carroll
    Wade Evans Wade
    Matt Ebert Coverboy,Coverboy
    Scott Patrick Green Coverboy/Cafe Kid
    Tom Cramer Coverboy
    Vana O'Brien Sharon Waters
    Shaun Jordan Cafe Kid
    Shawn Jones Cafe Kid
    George Conner Bad George
    Oliver Kirk Indian Cop
    Stanley Hainesworth Dirtman
    Joshua Halladay Baby Mike
    Douglas Tollenen Little Richard
    Stephen Clark Pachosa Hotel Manager
    Lannie Swerdlow Disco Manager
    Wally Gaarsland Rock Promoter
    Bryan Wilson Rock Promoter,Rock Promoter
    Mark Weaver Rock Promoter
    Conrad 'Bud' Montgomery Rock Promoter
    Pat Patterson Cop
    Steve Vernelson Cop
    Mike Cascadden Cop
    Eric Hull Mayor's Aide
    James A. Arling Minister
    James Caviezel Airline Clerk
    Ana Cavinato Stewardess
    Melanie Mosely Lounge Hostess
    Greg Murphy Carl
    David Reppinhagen Yuppie at Jake's
    Tiger Warren Himself
    Massimo DeCataldo Italian Street Boy
    Pao Pei Andreoli Italian Street Boy
    Robert Egon Italian Street Boy
    Paolo Baiocco Italian Street Boy
    Mario Stracciarolo Mike's Italian Client
    Jesse Merz Mean Kid (uncredited)

    Technical Credits
    Laurie Parker Producer
    Gus Van Sant Executive Producer,Screenwriter,Producer
    William Shakespeare Screenwriter
    Solomon J. LeFlore Producer
    Allan Mindel Producer
    Tom Arndt Special Effects
    Peter Appleton Sound Effects
    Forrest Brakeman Sound Effects

    Scene Index

    Acknowledgments ix

    Introduction John A. Hall Ove Korsgaard 3

    Part 1 Theoretical Groundwork

    1 Nation Building and State Building Francis Fukuyama 29

    2 Icons of Nationalism Anthony D. Smith 51

    3 Between Tradition and Modernity: Grundtvig and Cultural Nationalism Michael Böss 79

    Part 2 Enabling Conditions

    4 Religious Revivalism in Sweden and Denmark Hanne Sanders 95

    5 The Nation as Event: The Dissolution of the Oldenburg Monarchy and Grundtvig's Nationalism Uffe Østergård 110

    6 Why Denmark Did Not Become Switzerland Jason O. Jensen John A. Hall 134

    Part 3 Grundtvig and the People

    7 "Hand of King and Voice of People": Grundtvig on Democracy and the Responsibility of the Self Tine Damsholt 151

    8 On the Church, the State, and the School: Grundtvig as Enlightenment Philosopher and Social Thinker Uffe Jonas 169

    9 How Grundtvig Became a Nation Builder Ove Korsgaard 192

    Part 4 Comparison

    10 Fichte and Grundtvig as Educators of the People Per Øhrgaard 213

    11 Come Together: Thoughts and Theories on Social Cohesion in the Work of Nikolai Grundtvig and Émile Durkheim Katrine Baunvig 232

    12 "The Gordian Knot": Grundtvig and British Liberalism Ole Vind 254

    13 Grundtvig and the Slavic Awakening in East Central Europe: (Con)textual Parallels, Mutual Perceptions Peter Bugge 267

    14 Crisis of Religion and Nineteenth-Century Spiritual Reform: Varieties of Nation Building in Grundtvig and Emerson Troels Nørager 284

    15 Community and Individuality: Grundtvigian and Kierkegaardian Protestantism in Denmark Mattas Møl Dalsgaard 300

    Part 5 Transmission

    16 Grundrvig's Idea of a People's High School and Its Historical Influence Ove Korsgaard 315

    17 Grundtvigianism as Practice and Experience Andrew Buckser 331

    18 The Popular Voicing of Sport: Comparative Aspects of Grundtvigian Movement Culture Henning Eichberg 346

    19 Windmills, Butter, and Bacon: The Circulation of Scientific Knowledge among Grundtvigians in the Decades around 1900 Hans Henrik Hjermitslev 362

    20 An Ongoing Influence: The Political Application of Grundrvig's Ideas in the Debate on Danish Society, 2001-09 Esben Lunde Larsen 381

    21 The Economic Consequences of the Size of Nations: Denmark in Comparative Perspective John L. Campbell John A. Hall 396

    Conclusion Ove K. Pedersen 412

    Contributors 427

    Index 431

    Gus Van Sant's dreamtime riff on Shakespeare's "Henry IV, Parts I and II" features River Phoenix as Mike Waters, a narcoleptic male hustler who is first seen drifting on a stretch of highway in Idaho. Mike shifts from Seattle to Portland, where he has taken up with Scott Favor (Keanu Reeves), who is also a hustler. The difference between them is Mike's sleepy state betrays an uncertain future, while Scott is ready to inherit a fortune from his father within a week. Mike feels a real affection for Scott, but Scott does not believe men can really love each other. Besides, Scott is mostly hustling as a means of slumming and killing time before he inherits his money. Mike, however, delusionally thinks Scott will continue with his life as a drifter after receiving his inheritance. Mike's belief is shared by the dregs of Portland, who live out of an abandoned hotel with their spiritual leader Bob (film director William Richert). They're convinced Scott's fortune will benefit them all, when in reality Scott has other plans.

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    Gus Van Sant's third feature further established him as a spokesman not just for alienated gay men but also for disaffected youth in general. A harsh, beautiful, and fervently original portrait of alienation, betrayal, and unrequited love, My Own Private Idaho was one of the defining films of both Van Sant's career and the New Queer Cinema of the 1990s. While Drugstore Cowboy (1989), Van Sant's previous film, had focused on a group of people driven to society's fringes by their drug addiction, Idaho dramatizes a group of people driven to society's fringes by their sexuality. As in Cowboy, Van Sant refrains from grand pronouncements about the lifestyle of the social/sexual outlaw; and his focus on the relationship between River Phoenix's Mike and Keanu Reeves' Scott gives the film emotional resonance. Phoenix in particular is heartbreaking as the lovelorn, narcoleptic Mike, whose campfire-side declaration of love for Scott remains one of the most poignant and honest depictions of male-to-male longing ever captured onscreen. Phoenix's quiet, raw portrayal of the young hustler would be constantly referenced in tributes to the actor following his untimely death in 1993, and the close association seems fitting: with its bleak, dreamy ambience and mournful yet unsentimental story, My Own Private Idaho feels less like a narrative than like an elegy for the romantic aimlessness of youthful alienation.
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