Leaves of Grass (film)

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Directed byTim Blake Nelson
Written byTim Blake Nelson
Produced by
Starring
Leaves of Grass
A green book cover, the name of the author Walt Whitman has a line through it, with "Edward Norton & Edward Norton" writing above instead. The cover includes Polaroid photographs of two men who look very alike, although one has a beard and long hair and the other is clean shaven. Below the photographs are bullets and a packet of cigarette rolling papers.
Promotional poster
Directed byTim Blake Nelson
Written byTim Blake Nelson
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyRoberto Schaefer
Edited byMichelle Botticelli
Music byJeff Danna
Production
company
Distributed byMillennium Films
Release dates
  • September 14, 2009 (2009-09-14) (TIFF)
  • September 17, 2010 (2010-09-17) (United States)
Running time
105 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$9 million[1]
Box office$1,018,753[1]

Leaves of Grass is a 2009 American black comedy film written and directed by Tim Blake Nelson. It stars Edward Norton as twin brothers, alongside Richard Dreyfuss, Nelson, Susan Sarandon, Melanie Lynskey and Keri Russell.

Set in Nelson's home state of Oklahoma, most of the film was actually filmed in northwestern Louisiana, which was selected for its generous film production incentives. A few scenes were filmed in Tulsa.[2][3]

Leaves of Grass was featured at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival,[4] and had a limited domestic release by First Look Studios on just six screen April 2, 2010.[5] It failed to impress at the domestic box office, earning a meager US$70,066 in ticket sales against a production budget of US$9,000,000.[6] Critical reception was slightly positive, but mixed.[7] The film fared much better internationally, earning US$948,687.[1]

Bill Kincaid is lecturing his class at Brown University about Plato's Socratic dialogues. Meanwhile, Bill's identical twin brother Brady Kincaid is living in Oklahoma, growing and selling hydroponic cannabis. Brady is under pressure from local drug lord Pug Rothbaum to expand his sales. Despite needing money to repay a debt to Rothbaum, Brady refuses.

After a phone call from Brady's partner Bolger telling him that Brady has died from a crossbow arrow, Bill flies to Tulsa, meeting a Jewish orthodontist on the plane. In Tulsa, Bill is mistaken for Brady and is beaten up and knocked unconscious by rival marijuana dealers angry that Brady has taken half their territory. When Bill wakes, he finds that Brady is alive and has tricked him into travelling to Tulsa. Brady asks Bill to pretend to be Brady while he goes up state to "take care" of Rothbaum. Bill initially refuses, but later agrees, after meeting local poet Janet as he wants to stay and get to know her better.

While Bill (pretending to be Brady) visits their mother, thus giving Brady an alibi, Bolger and Brady go to a synagogue in Tulsa, where Rothbaum is listening to a sermon. Also present is Ken Feinman, the orthodontist Bill met on the plane. He sees Brady and mistakes him for Bill. Brady and Bolger leave with Rothbaum, and Rothbaum demands the money Brady owes him. When Rothbaum threatens to kill them if they don't pay up, Bolger shoots Rothbaum's thugs, and Brady stabs Rothbaum, killing him.

In Tulsa, Ken Feinman hears of Rothbaum's murder and figures everything out. He purchases a gun and sets off for Brady's house, where he encounters Bill and Brady and threatens to shoot them. Bill takes the gun from him but Ken panics and uses Bolger's rifle to shoot Brady, after which Bill shoots Ken in retaliation. Before dying, Brady tells Bill to place the gun in his hand, which Bill does.

After an abortive attempt to sell Brady's dope-growing system to one of Brady's former rivals, Bill is shot through the chest by a crossbow. Bolger frantically drives him to hospital, saving Bill's life, and thereby repaying his debt to Brady (who had saved his life in prison). Bill is forced to stay in Tulsa for a long recuperation after his injury, allowing him time to heal his relationship with his mother and develop his romance with Janet.

Cast

Soundtrack

The film featured the following songs:[9]

  1. "Stand Up" by Doug Bossi
  2. "Illegal Smile" by John Prine
  3. "My Wildest Dreams Grow Wilder Every Day" by The Flatlanders
  4. "Faithful and True" by Richard Myhill
  5. "Fat Man In The Bathtub" by Little Feat
  6. "Rex's Blues" by Townes Van Zandt
  7. "Sailin' Shoes" by Little Feat
  8. "Sweet Revenge" by John Prine
  9. "I Shall Be Released" by The Band
  10. "Lonely Are The Free" by Steve Earle
  11. "Boys From Oklahoma" by Cross Canadian Ragweed

Release

References

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