Ah Garden State… I love how Braff talks about the journey of making it. So organic. So natural. Untainted by the world at that time. It really brings back that feeling of nostalgia and hope and “I can do anything creative if I set my mind to it” mentality of the early 2000s.
@@goldfishy it’s harder for indie movies to succeed the way they did during that time. Sure the equipment may be easier to come by and to create a good looking film is far less expensive now than it was back then but, people used to give indie films a chance back then. If it’s not a blockbuster or a superhero film people simply aren’t going to pay money to watch it, which sucks.
@@justbaz7471 No it's not because now there are so many platforms and media channels to promote those films and find an audience for them. People STILL want to see all kinds of movies not just big action flicks.
I definitely see Garden State as a very vulnerable movie. Maybe the most vulnerable of all time. It was a very brave production. I personally love how honest it is. I could see a lot of kids today refer to it as "cringe" because of its vulnerability, but that's because they grew up in a technocratic blip culture that rejects all forms of meaningful dialogue and deep reflection in life.
I still cannot forget the line from that rap "All the kids looking up to me can suck my d**k" 😂😂 A true legend. She's had a 30 year old career and she is 41 right now
Man, I love Garden State. The guy at Blockbuster recommended it and it became like my security blanket for a long time. I was a young man 15+ years ago. I had a motorcycle and was trying to get girls. My dad was kinda rich and I had very few responsibilities but my mom, while living, was unavailable. I had these friends who behaved a lot like the ones in the film. Thank you, Zach, for making this movie.
Same. My cousin let me borrow the soundtrack and I fell for zero 7 and eventually that led me to portishead. As a 15 yr old back then I was blown away by both bands.
Garden State was an important movie for me in my 20s. It really important to know how to meet someone beautiful that also sees your worth. It’s fundamental.
Was 17 in ‘05 and pulled Garden State out of one of those bargain bins in a Walgreens or Walmart and fell absolutely in love with it. Also fell in love with Zero 7 and fell in love with Sia Furler before the world knew her as SIA years later. Their loss, my gain Lol
Garden State is such a time capsule of 2004 and it has a killer soundtrack. Maybe it's aged poorly, I don't want to re-watch it now to find out if it holds up or not, but I really loved it when I was nineteen.
I’m 20 currently and I can say wholeheartedly that Garden State definitely holds up. It stands very clearly on its own two feet along with many indie films from that era. Absolutely incredible era of indie filmmaking.
I've read some recent reviews of Garden State, people bashing the movie because Portman's character is - according to them, what I disagree - "just another Manic Pixie Dream Girl". Sometimes I guess people, are so desperate to look cool on social medias, that they barely try to understand what they are reading or watching, as long as they can pick up on something and get likes attacking that. In my view, that story is about two lost person finding a way together. It's not the typical MPDG, where the woman has no personality, endings or reason to be other than saving the main male character. They kind of save each other. The movie builds their both personalities, so how it's a typical MPDG as some people claim?
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-r4mCpbuLB_o.html Conan's Interview with Zach in November 2003, a month and a half before Garden State's release.
Garden State is a film for a very specific time in ones life. Late teens, early twenties, when you have absolutely no idea who you are. You feel lost with no direction, and it resonates so well. I still enjoy the film, but it just doesn’t do the same thing for me as it did back then. It’s still fun and has good moments, but it’s time for being something that profoundly speaks to me has passed. Maybe that’s just me, but it feels like a film for a certain age group. Once you’re a little bit older, have a grasp a little more of who you are and have experienced more, some of it feels a little trite and contrived. It lacks the depth that you thought you once saw. It rolls like the thoughts of a late teenager who has just discovered all these things. I know I’m gonna get smacked with hate in the comments, but that’s just how I feel about it now. If you still enjoy it to the same extent, that’s cool. Glad you do.
A cult classic movie with amazing soundtrack with precise timing, The perfect actors for the perfect movie rolls. The movie can help a lot of people get through a lot of hard times.
Zach Braff is a badass. I love Garden State. It took me a while to really grasp the brilliance of it, but I get it now. He deserves all the credit he gets..
Happy Birthday Mr. Braff. Born 6th April. I hope Conan made him a cake. Btw, he was 28 when he did Garden State, so he was not "very young". Steven Speiberg directed Jaws at 27, and had already done Duel ( at 24 ! ) and The Sugarland Express
Garden State got a lot of criticism but overall it was a well crafted and well performed project and it was nice to see Peter Sarsgaard play someone who wasnt evil lol
Did it get a lot of criticism? I remember it being pretty universally beloved when it came out. Made lots of money and was an official selection of the Sundance Film Festival.
@@amandagregg9368 "a lot" is kind of relative, but it did get some backlash for various reasons, one being the "manic pixie dream girl" trope that this movie is often labled with regarding the Portman character as it pertains to Braff's protagonist's conflicts, which is deserving in some aspects and maybe not as deserving in others in my opinion. There is also, as Braff alludes in the video clip, some plot elements that people didn't take too seriously and as such were often labeled as too "cute", "twee", "over indulgent"....The backlash seemed kinda similar in some ways to the one Juno received a few years later. They essentially got good helping of that Sundance-hit-hipster backlash haha
@@emilianoo.1596 I think Scott Pilgrim has absorbed a lot of the manic pixie accusations now but that is besides the point and i agree with everything you posted pretty much thanks
I'm here after seeing Garden State again (I saw it in the theater when it came out at least twice as I recall) while on a flight to Vegas from Dallas and was reminded why GS is one of my favorite films of all time. "Oh, and it says balls on your face…" - I started to really study at this time and there are so many moments of intimate genius, for lack of a better way of putting it in this one film that it's sort of miraculous. Films DRIVE to hopefully have one or two great moments like those peppered throughout this tremendous film! Never gets old.
Funny. But FYI there are safer ways to start a siphon than sucking on the hose. You just need the liquid on the outlet side lower than the inlet sides liquid surface level. For example, push the hose farther into liquid to fill it up, cover the hose end, take back out. Or point the outlet up and pour water into it, cover outlet so hose doesn't drain into tank, lower hose. And so on.
Could be because the microphones are sitting right on the table surface. I don't notice because my mac mini speaker is basically a high pass filter LOL.
There's no chance garden state paid Natalie Portman what she normally would make/could have been making on another, bigger film. So yes, I'm sure she was paid, but that was certainly not the primary motivator, because otherwise she would have just gone and done some huge blockbuster. (Like thor lol). The fact that she chose to spend her time Not making as much money as possible is what makes it an interesting topic for discussion
In the industry, for that role in the production, at not even 30? Yea, you're a young nobody, a baby, especially if you go ask to a top Hollywood star to be in your stuff. It's not the "30 in the common world" type he's referring to here.
That is very young for a director. Especially from within the studio system where a director was expected to have worked through different roles. And with the exception of directors who started out in film college productions, its still pretty young even in the indie film world. And more importantly, he FELT young.
He was 25 when he wrote Garden State and 29 by the time it premiered. Which is VERY young to have written and directed a feature film. Starring Natalie Portman nonetheless. Not a huge Zach Braff fan, but credit where credit is due.
@@DanielBoonelightthat’s ironic you say that because it seems like you can’t read the room. It’s one of those movies you either love it or hate it. I happen to like it but I can see why some hate it. It seems like a really long music video more than a movie
I remember watching that movie as a teenager and loving it. Watching it as an adult ruins it because all I see now are a bunch of young people wasting their youth and complaining.