Adam Driver stars a bus
driver named Paterson who lives in Paterson, New Jersey. This seems like the premise for a really bad
movie, but it’s actually one of the more quietly powerful films I’ve seen in a
long time. When he’s not driving the bus
and eavesdropping on the strange conversations the commuters make, he’s writing
poems in his “secret” notebook. Paterson
is also quite supportive of his girlfriend who is always busy making quaint art
projects and baking cupcakes (not to mention those around him who create their
own unique brands of artistic expression) while never really having the
confidence to share his own work.
Paterson is required
viewing for anyone who juggles producing independent art with having a
"real" job. Since the
character of Paterson is such a creature of habit, the first half of the film
is a bit of a slog to get through.
That’s mostly because writer/director Jim Jarmusch does such an accurate
job at portraying his boring, mundane everyday existence. We need to experience the unchanging routine
of Paterson’s life to fully appreciate him.
That way, when something outside of his routine happens, it feels almost
catastrophic. The last act of the
picture may feel slight when compared to most films. Since we’ve been so firmly placed in his
shoes, we are devastated when something bad finally occurs.
This is the kind of
movie that flummoxes the Star Rating. I
was pretty bored with the deliberate first hour and actually turned the movie
off halfway through because I started falling asleep. I finished it the next day and was just about
in tears by the end. Despite the fact
that I was bored by the first half, you really need that deliberate pace to
sell the finale. Without it, the ending
doesn’t mean nearly as much.
I watched this movie
about a week ago and put off immediately writing about it. I’m glad I did too because I haven’t stopped
thinking about it since. The more I
think about it, the more it affects me on a deeper personal level. I see a lot of myself in the main character
and that is something that can often be hard to handle. I have also dealt with setbacks similar to
what he endures, which is both painful and exhilarating at the same time. Paterson is a unique and haunting movie and
one of Jarmusch’s best.