The best Amos Poe’s movies

Amos Poe

Amos Poe

01/01/1949 (75 años)
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Amos Poe’s movies, although you may have ordered them differently. In any case, we hope you love it and with a little luck discovering a movie that you still don’t know about Amos Poe.

Blank City

Blank City
7.1/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 06/04/2011
  • Character: Himself
In the years before Ronald Reagan took office, Manhattan was in ruins. But true art has never come from comfort, and it was precisely those dire circumstances that inspired artists like Jim Jarmusch, Lizzy Borden, and Amos Poe to produce some of their best works. Taking their cues from punk rock and new wave music, these young maverick filmmakers confronted viewers with a stark reality that stood in powerful contrast to the escapist product being churned out by Hollywood.

Downtown '81

Downtown '81
6.9/10
  • Genre: ComedyDramaMusic
  • Release: 13/07/2001
  • Character: Conversationalist at Mudd Club
The film is a day in the life of a young artist, Jean-Michel Basquiat, who needs to raise money to reclaim the apartment from which he has been evicted. He wanders the downtown streets carrying a painting he hopes to sell, encountering friends, whose lives (and performances) we peek into.

The Foreigner

The Foreigner
5/10
  • Genre: DramaThriller
  • Release: 01/01/1978
  • Character: Amos Nitrate
A French special op suffers an existential crisis as he wanders New York City in search of a mission and the requisite connections.

Hunter

Hunter
4.6/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 27/07/2013
  • Character: Felix
Two friends vie for the attention of a stranger who passes out at their doorstep.

Subway Riders

Subway Riders
5.7/10
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Release: 02/04/1981
  • Character: Writer Ant
A psychotic saxophone player (played both by Amos Poe and John Lurie) lures victims to deserted spots with his music and then guns them down.

TV Party

TV Party
6.9/10
From 1978 to 1982, Glenn O'Brien hosted a New York city public access cable TV show called TV Party. Co-hosted by Chris Stein, from Blondie, and directed by filmmaker Amos Poe, the hour long show took television where it had never gone before: to the edge of civility and "sub-realism" as Glenn would put it. Walter Steding and his TV Party "Orchestra" provided a musical accompaniment to the madness at hand, and many artists and musicians, from The Clash, Nile Rodgers, Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Bryne and Arto Lindsey were regular guests. It was the cocktail party that could be a political party. With 80 hours of disintegrating 3/4 inch videotape as a starting point, we tracked down the trend setting participants still living today and found out what they remember of the period and how the show influenced their lives. This, combined with clips from the orginal show, became the documentary "TV Party.

Stiletto

Stiletto
A woman, Nadja, searches for her sister's murderer. This search goes through differing moments of reality, or unreality, that overlap within facets of a broken-up time sense. In this emulation of film noir, the investigative structure does not create suspense; the dialectic murderer/victim does not exist. The crime is fabricated bit by bit, like the staging of a spectacle, and it is in the traditional tools of seduction (the spiked heels) that the weapons will be hidden. Ultimately, the crime Nadja achieves makes her neither a triumphant heroine nor a victim.

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