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Sweet and Lowdown
Overlook Pick

Sweet and Lowdown

68
User Score562 ratings
TMDB 6.816+19991h 35mEnglish
ComedyDramaMusic

Synopsis

In the 1930s, jazz guitarist Emmet Ray idolizes Django Reinhardt, faces gangsters and falls in love with a mute woman.

Director
Woody AllenFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Sweetland Films3 production companies
Release
December 3, 1999Released
Box Office
$5MBudget $30M

Top Cast

8 of 73
Sean Penn
Sean Penn
Emmet Ray
Samantha Morton
Samantha Morton
Hattie
Anthony LaPaglia
Anthony LaPaglia
Al Torrio
Uma Thurman
Uma Thurman
Blanche Williams
James Urbaniak
James Urbaniak
Harry
John Waters
John Waters
Mr. Haynes
Gretchen Mol
Gretchen Mol
Ellie
Denis O'Hare
Denis O'Hare
Jake

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
May 8, 2024

Presented in a documentary style, this drama looks at the life of the fictional jazz guitarist "Emmet Ray" (Sean Penn). Now, of course, he is American so is naturally the best in the whole wide world, well second best actually, and that is testified to by frequent obsequious pieces-to-camera from purported experts and then by his own performances as he plays standards from the likes of Django Reinhardt, the masterful Stéphane Grapelli and Duke Ellington. Director Woody Allen has a penchant for this style of music, and as faux-homages go this isn't at all bad. That's really thanks to a strong contribution from Sean Penn as the frankly pretty odious character who's selfishness was probably only eclipsed by his increasing obsession with the shy mute "Hattie" (a gorgeous effort from Samantha Morton) who comes to depend on him, but might he actually come to depend on her too - despite himself? It's a great looking film with plenty of attention to detail, and it does work well at illustrating just how important it is for people to have decent anchors in their lives. The dialogue is all a bit too relentless for me with very little time to come up for air as this rattles along but it's all genuinely and uncomfortably plausible at times, too. Pity about the constant hyperbole, though - how can anyone be the best guitarist? Hmmm?

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