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Nashville

  • 1975
  • R
  • 2h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
30K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,704
543
Nashville (1975)
Home Video Trailer from Paramount Home Entertainment
Play trailer2:11
1 Video
99+ Photos
SatireTragedyComedyDramaMusic

Over the course of a few hectic days, numerous interrelated people prepare for a political convention.Over the course of a few hectic days, numerous interrelated people prepare for a political convention.Over the course of a few hectic days, numerous interrelated people prepare for a political convention.

  • Director
    • Robert Altman
  • Writer
    • Joan Tewkesbury
  • Stars
    • Keith Carradine
    • Karen Black
    • Ronee Blakley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    30K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,704
    543
    • Director
      • Robert Altman
    • Writer
      • Joan Tewkesbury
    • Stars
      • Keith Carradine
      • Karen Black
      • Ronee Blakley
    • 207User reviews
    • 118Critic reviews
    • 96Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 23 wins & 25 nominations total

    Videos1

    Nashville
    Trailer 2:11
    Nashville

    Photos168

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Keith Carradine
    Keith Carradine
    • Tom Frank
    Karen Black
    Karen Black
    • Connie White
    Ronee Blakley
    Ronee Blakley
    • Barbara Jean
    Shelley Duvall
    Shelley Duvall
    • L. A. Joan
    David Arkin
    David Arkin
    • Norman
    Barbara Baxley
    Barbara Baxley
    • Lady Pearl
    Ned Beatty
    Ned Beatty
    • Delbert Reese
    Timothy Brown
    Timothy Brown
    • Tommy Brown
    Geraldine Chaplin
    Geraldine Chaplin
    • Opal
    Robert DoQui
    Robert DoQui
    • Wade
    • (as Robert Doqui)
    Allen Garfield
    Allen Garfield
    • Barnett
    Henry Gibson
    Henry Gibson
    • Haven Hamilton
    Scott Glenn
    Scott Glenn
    • Pfc. Glenn Kelly
    Jeff Goldblum
    Jeff Goldblum
    • Tricycle Man
    Barbara Harris
    Barbara Harris
    • Albuquerque
    David Hayward
    David Hayward
    • Kenny Fraiser
    Michael Murphy
    Michael Murphy
    • John Triplette
    Allan F. Nicholls
    Allan F. Nicholls
    • Bill
    • (as Allan Nicholls)
    • Director
      • Robert Altman
    • Writer
      • Joan Tewkesbury
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews207

    7.629.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8anhedonia

    One of the great films of our time

    I suppose the brilliance of "Nashville" is that almost 30 years after its initial release, Robert Altman's slice of Americana has lost none of its punch. Despite being made in the Watergate and Vietnam era, the film remains relevant as ever.

    In fact, one could argue, the film's even more relevant today in this age of celebrity-worship and apathetic, gutless American media who believe missing suburban wives are more pertinent and crucial to this nation's well-being than questioning facts and our leaders' motives for waging a needless, costly war.

    The film's about the politics of country music, families, stardom, search for stardom, political manipulation and populist political candidates. The unseen presidential candidate's spiel in "Nashville" could easily have been sound bites from contemporary populists; he could be seen as the cinematic trend-setter for the Ross Perots, Jesse Venturas, Howard Deans and Ralph Naders.

    The film is at once a political drama, musical and documentary all effortless woven together by a master storyteller, who truly is an American treasure. In "Nashville," Altman's overlapping dialogue works to perfection as he captures this panoramic view of five days in Nashville through the eyes of two-dozen characters.

    With so many characters, it's Altman's genius that he keeps this an engrossing character study. Although he tosses aside all conventions of narrative storytelling, we get to know characters better in "Nashville" than we do in many contemporary dramas with fewer characters. There's Ronee Blakley's country singer; Lily Tomlin's doting housewife and mother; Scott Glenn's caring soldier; Keith Carradine's lecherous pop star; Ned Beatty's disinterested father; Keenan Wynn's loving husband; Michael Murphy's sleazy campaigner; and Gwen Welles' sad wannabe country singer, whose scene at a political fund-raiser is heartbreaking. And Jeff Goldblum's motorcyclist and Geraldine Chaplin's Opal are the threads that weave through all the lives in this marvelous tapestry.

    There are plenty of terrific songs in "Nashville" - some might complain too many - but the best are Carradine's Oscar-winning "I'm Easy" and "It Don't Bother Me." They add to the nice sense of cynicism that layers the movie.

    Altman's one of the big reasons the 1970s is regarded as the greatest decade of American filmmaking. Look at just a few of his contributions in that decade - "Nashville," "MASH" (1970), "Brewster McCloud" (1970), "McCabe and Mrs. Miller" (1971), "Images" (1972) and "The Long Goodbye" (1973). His films also influence other talented filmmakers, including Alan Rudolph (who worked on Altman films) and Paul Thomas Anderson, whose storytelling style - "Boogie Nights" (1997) and "Magnolia" (1999) - clearly is Altman-inspired.
    6alansabljakovic-39044

    Not my thing

    Nashville has 24 "main" characters and I didn't care about a single one! The movie is overstuffed and mostly boring, the characters aren't that interesting (except maybe 1 or 2 of them) and it's really hard to keep up what's going on. Most of the time I was like wait who are you again? The second part of the movie was much better and some character development was happening, I also loved the ending! This is my first Altman but I'm excited to watch more of his movies.
    10sryder@judson-il.edu

    a milestone in my filmgoing experience

    I saw Nashville when it was first shown, billed as Altman's "birthday card" to America on the occasion of the bicentennial. The greatest tribute I can pay is that, despite its frequent shifts of location, many individual scenes and characterizations, as well as the overarching story line, remained vivid in my mind over the years before I was able to purchase the film on video. When I taught Film History at my college I used Nashville as the final examination for the course. After having viewed the film, students were instructed to identify the elements of film technique previously studied(such as overlapping dialogue, jump shots, widescreen, etc) in order to forward the narrative, as they were employed by Altman. In general, they did very well; even those who disliked the film. There are too many admirable performances for me to mention; however, those that remained most vivid in my mind over the years were those of Gwen Welles, Ronee Blakley, Henry Gibson, and Lily Tomlin. One last note of appreciation regards the fact that all the characters were introduced within the first twenty minutes at the airport; their personalities brought out in the highway scene;and their being brought together again, cyclically, during the last twenty minutes at the "Parthenon". It has been several years since I used Nashville for pedagogical purposes. When I purchased the DVD recently I found that, despite my numerous viewings and classroom analysis, the impact was virtually the same as when I first saw it in 1976. For me, it did not "murder to dissect" this personal milestone.
    Bsherris

    Words Fail Me...

    Nashville was the first "R" rated film that my father took me to see. At 14 years of age, I was many years from NYU film school, and a neophyte when it came to appreciating cinema.

    I am now 39, and to date I have seen tens of thousands of films, not to mention possessing a sizable video library. Considering my love of social politics, there is not a month that goes by that I have not thought of this film for one reason or another. There are some movies that you simply see, and there are the rare few that become part of the soul.

    Simply said, Nashville is a singular work of cinematic genius that has gone dreadfully under appreciated for the last 25 years. It is a film chock full of life's little (and not so little) truths; some happy, some sad...all meaningful.

    Now that it is making a long overdue reappearance on DVD in it's original (and integral) widescreen format, it is my sincerest hope that people will avail themselves of the opportunity to discover this forgotten gem for themselves.

    Lastly, that this film did not make the AFI's 100 great American films is an absolute sin.
    10gftbiloxi

    Altman's Masterpiece: "The Damnedest Thing You Ever Saw"

    Robert Altman is an extremely divisive director in the sense that you either "get it" or you don't--and those who don't despise his work and take considerable pleasure in sneering at NASHVILLE in particular. But there is no way around the fact that it is an important film, a highly influential film, to most Altman fans his finest films, and to most series critics quite possibly the single finest film made during the whole of the 1970s.

    According to the movie trailer available on the DVD release, NASHVILLE is "the damnedest thing you ever saw"--and a truer thing was never said, for it is one of those rare film that completely defies description. On one level, the film follows the lives of some twenty characters over the course of several days leading up to a political rally, lives that collide or don't collide, that have moments of success and failure, and which in the process explore the hypocrisy that we try to sweep away under the rug of American culture. If it were merely that, the film would be so much soap-opera, but it goes quite a bit further: it juxtaposes its observations with images of American patriotism and politics at their most vulgar, and in the process it makes an incredibly funny, incredibly sad, and remarkably savage statement on the superficial values that plague our society.

    What most viewers find difficult about NASHVILLE--and about many Altman films--is his refusal to direct our attention within any single scene. Conversations and plot directions overlap with each other, and so much goes on in every scene that you are constantly forced to decide what you will pay attention to and what you will ignore. The result is a film that goes in a hundred different directions with a thousand different meanings, and it would be safe to say that every person who sees it will see a different film.

    In the end, however, all these roads lead to Rome, or in this case to the Roman coliseum of American politics, where fame is gained or lost in the wake of violence, where the strong consume the weak without any real personal malice, and where the current political star is only as good as press agent's presentation. For those willing and able to dive into the complex web of life it presents, Altman's masterpiece will be an endlessly fascinating mirror in which we see the energy of life itself scattered, gathered, and reflected back to us. A masterpiece that bears repeated viewings much in the same way that a great novel bears repeated readings. A personal favorite and highly, highly recommended.

    Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film was very much improvised by the actors and actresses, who used the screenplay only as a guide. They spent a great amount of their time in character, and the movie was shot almost entirely in sequence.
    • Goofs
      When attempting to interview Tommy Brown, Opal says that she is from the BBC. When questioned, she explains that this stands for the British Broadcasting Company. It actually stands for the British Broadcasting Corporation. This was intentionally done to insinuate that Opal doesn't actually work for the BBC and was an impostor. Geraldine Chaplin confirmed this in a 2000 interview in Premiere magazine.
    • Quotes

      Hal Phillip Walker: Who do you think is running Congress? Farmers? Engineers? Teachers? Businessmen? No, my friends. Congress is run by lawyers. A lawyer is trained for two things and two things only. To clarify - that's one. And to confuse - that's the other thing. He does whichever is to his client's advantage. Did you ever ask a lawyer the time of day? He told you how to make a watch, didn't he? Ever ask a lawyer how to get to Mr. Jones' house in the country? You got lost, didn't you? Congress is composed of five hundred and thirty-five individuals. Two hundred and eighty-eight are lawyers. And you wonder what's wrong in Congress? No wonder we often know how to make a watch, but we don't know - the time of day.

    • Crazy credits
      The Paramount logo is in black and white and the image looks shaky. The scratchy effect was reportedly achieved when director Robert Altman took the negative with the logo on it, threw it onto the ground, and stomped on it.
    • Connections
      Featured in Precious Images (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      It Don't Worry Me
      Music and Lyrics by Keith Carradine

      Performed by Barbara Harris

      Lions Gate Music Co. / Easy Music (ASCAP)

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 1975 (Canada)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Nešvil
    • Filming locations
      • Nashville, Tennessee, USA
    • Production companies
      • ABC Entertainment
      • American Broadcasting Company (ABC)
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,200,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $9,984,123
    • Gross worldwide
      • $9,995,876
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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