The best Jordan’s movies

Jordan

Jordan

23/06/1955 (68 años)
Today we present the best Jordan’s movies. If you are a great movie fan, you will surely know most of them, but we hope to discover a movie that you have not yet seen … and that you love! Let’s go there with the best Jordan’s movies.

Sebastiane

Sebastiane
6.2/10
  • Genre: Drama
  • Release: 17/12/1976
  • Character: Madame Morgana, Emperor's Guest
Rome, AD 303. Emperor Diocletian demotes his favourite, Sebastian, from captain of the palace guard to the rank of common soldier and banishes him to a remote coastal outpost where his fellow soldiers, weakened by their desires, turn to homosexual activities to satisfy their needs. Sebastian becomes the target of lust for the officer Severus, but repeatedly rejects the man's advances. Castigated for his Christian faith, he is tortured, humiliated and ultimately killed.

Jubilee

Jubilee
6/10
Queen Elizabeth I visits late twentieth-century Britain to find a depressing landscape where life has changed since her time.

The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle

The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle
6.4/10
  • Genre: ComedyDocumentaryMusic
  • Release: 11/09/1980
  • Character: Girl wearing 'only anarchists are pretty shirt' (uncredited)
A rather incoherent post-breakup Sex Pistols "documentary", told from the point of view of Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren, whose (arguable) position is that the Sex Pistols in particular and punk rock in general were an elaborate scam perpetrated by him in order to make "a million pounds."

The Filth and the Fury

The Filth and the Fury
7.6/10
  • Genre: DocumentaryMusic
  • Release: 29/03/2000
  • Character: Herself (archive footage)
Julien Temple's second documentary profiling punk rock pioneers the Sex Pistols is an enlightening, entertaining trip back to a time when the punk movement was just discovering itself. Featuring archival footage, never-before-seen performances, rehearsals, and recording sessions as well as interviews with group members who lived to tell the tale--including the one and only John Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten).

Nightshift

Nightshift
  • Release: 01/01/1981
  • Character: Receptionist
It is night and, in the foyer of a small hotel, a receptionist performs her tasks, unhurried and impassive, her face ghost-white, an emotional mask. Like the camera, she gazes steadily, both silent spectator and vicarious participant in the fantasies played out by the hotel's transient guests. As the night progresses, she answers a phone, hands over a key; guests pass back and forth gradually taking on a dream-like presence. She continues to work and, when morning comes, she leaves, her nightshift over. 'NIGHTSHIFT shows what film can do if the conventional pace of narrative is slowed down and montage diminished. It is not a new idea, of course, but the way it is done here is both absorbing to look at and satisfying from the moral point of view.' (Jill Forbes, Monthly Film Bulletin)

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