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I'm Still Here

  • 2010
  • R
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
25K
YOUR RATING
Joaquin Phoenix in I'm Still Here (2010)
A documentary on Joaquin Phoenix's transition from the acting world to a career as an aspiring rapper.
Play trailer1:04
3 Videos
22 Photos
MockumentaryComedyDramaMusic

Documents Joaquin Phoenix's transition from the acting world to a career as an aspiring rapper.Documents Joaquin Phoenix's transition from the acting world to a career as an aspiring rapper.Documents Joaquin Phoenix's transition from the acting world to a career as an aspiring rapper.

  • Director
    • Casey Affleck
  • Writers
    • Casey Affleck
    • Joaquin Phoenix
  • Stars
    • Joaquin Phoenix
    • Antony Langdon
    • Carey Perloff
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    25K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Casey Affleck
    • Writers
      • Casey Affleck
      • Joaquin Phoenix
    • Stars
      • Joaquin Phoenix
      • Antony Langdon
      • Carey Perloff
    • 124User reviews
    • 180Critic reviews
    • 48Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 4 nominations total

    Videos3

    I'm Still Here
    Trailer 1:04
    I'm Still Here
    "P. Diddy" from I'm Still Here
    Clip 1:32
    "P. Diddy" from I'm Still Here
    "P. Diddy" from I'm Still Here
    Clip 1:32
    "P. Diddy" from I'm Still Here
    I'm Still Here: P Diddy Clip
    Clip 1:31
    I'm Still Here: P Diddy Clip

    Photos22

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    + 18
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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Joaquin Phoenix
    Joaquin Phoenix
    • Joaquin Phoenix
    Antony Langdon
    • Anton
    Carey Perloff
    • Play Director
    Larry McHale
    • Larry McHale
    Casey Affleck
    Casey Affleck
    • Casey Affleck
    Jack Nicholson
    Jack Nicholson
    • Jack Nicholson
    Billy Crystal
    Billy Crystal
    • Billy Crystal
    Danny Glover
    Danny Glover
    • Danny Glover
    Bruce Willis
    Bruce Willis
    • Self - Guest
    Robin Wright
    Robin Wright
    • Robin Wright
    Johnny Moreno
    • Victor - Danny DeVito's Stand-In
    • (as Johnny Marino)
    Danny DeVito
    Danny DeVito
    • Danny DeVito
    Jerry Penacoli
    Jerry Penacoli
    • Jerry Penacoli
    Susan Patricola
    • Susan Patricola
    Patrick Whitesell
    Patrick Whitesell
    • Patrick Whitesell
    Nicole Acacio
    • Nicole Acario
    Matthew Maher
    Matthew Maher
    • Matt Maher
    Amanda Scheer-Demme
    • Amanda Demme
    • (as Amanda Demme)
    • Director
      • Casey Affleck
    • Writers
      • Casey Affleck
      • Joaquin Phoenix
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews124

    6.124.6K
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    Featured reviews

    9jamisen3

    This is brilliant work. I don't understand all the derision.

    Somehow, I feel like one of the only people who thinks this movie is absolutely genius and incredibly funny. Many leading critics seem to have missed the fact that this is a ruse. Reading in the NYT yesterday that Casey Affleck admitted it was not "reality" probably aided my ability to view the movie the way I did, but I am surprised that so many people have a negative reaction to what Affleck and Phoenix present and couldn't see the bigger picture even before the revelation was made. I am looking forward to J.P's appearance on Letterman next week, when I believe we will learn a lot more about their motivation in its production. In the meantime, however, I think a few things can be said that will not prove to be altogether ignorant on my part.

    First, this a movie made by professional actors. This is not Casey Affleck following a Joaquin Phoenix lacking self-awareness around with a camera because they have nothing better to do. It is a deliberate effort to create, and they are both collaborating. That should give everyone a good starting point. It is a real movie with thoughtful development, not the work of pedestrian journalists. With that in mind, it is easy to see just how much fun it would have been to make.

    The primary "conflict" in the movie is Joaquin's discomfort with the pressures on him and the risks he is taking in the face of so many expectations to keep producing the kinds of movies that won him accolades. The viewer who thinks the film is true life will believe he is throwing away a great movie career because he is the typical tragic celebrity who has it all, can't recognize it, is under chemical influence, and has no one around who cares enough to intervene. There are far too many clues to let that impression control throughout the film.

    When J.P. delivers monologues about how he's putting it all on the line, what we should understand is that the fake J.P. is talking about his hip-hop dream, while the real J.P. is acknowledging the risk he is taking by staying out of glossy big-budget blockbusters he had at his fingertips after Walk the Line. Keep in mind: he had to be this character for almost two whole years in order to make anyone bother to watch the movie. When you stack this kind of dedication up against a stupid movie about the drama behind Facebook, the farce of Jersey Shore, another crime movie set in Boston, and all the other garbage out there, I'm Still Here stands out as cutting-edge performance.

    Comparisons are easily made to works of Sacha Baron Cohen and Christopher Guest. The primary difference is the real-world gambit of Phoenix and the manipulation of the media, expanding the stage of performance beyond the theaters. And the audience isn't spoon-fed the humor. Yeah, they probably ticked off a lot of suited business people who wanted Phoenix to be predictable and stay in bounds, but the very point of the movie was that the Hollywood system is a fenced-in joke of a society and very easy to toy with. Of course, the sad truth is that so many fine performers have indeed self-destructed in similar fashion. Perhaps that is why people are uncomfortable with the movie; because it is plausible. But if J.P. can deceive so many so easily, it is all the more a masterpiece.
    9pkgod16

    Not Hollywood

    This is unlike any other movie ever made. Inventive. Joaquin made a movie, he was in character at all times. Whether or not he broke character or there were flaws or slips in the film, he had to keep in character any time he was in the public eye. He wasn't locked away on a set or in a remote location. He wasn't shielded from scrutiny until every word or action was carefully crafted by editors. He was acting in plan sight, having to flow and improvise anytime he was around the media. These guys are made a film by catching the media off guard, a media hoax, instead of the media paying there rent by displaying or exposing celebrity.

    This is the result of a history of celebrity turning the tables on the media. Edgar Allan Poe used the print media to conduct hoaxes for the end goal of entertainment and enlightenment. He manufactured a truth to raise questions, do you believe everything you read or hear in the case of Orson Wells? I commend the efforts and dedication that went into the making of this movie.

    Also, I wish no one had let me in on the ruse until I had seen the movie. Being fooled is fun, it's why magicians will always be entertaining despite the fact that we may adamantly dismiss the existence of magic.
    JohnDeSando

    To be, or not to be . . .

    "Joaquin, I'm sorry you couldn't be here tonight." David Letterman

    As a piece of performance art, I'm Still Here is as good a mockumentary about celebrity insanity as you will ever get, except, of course, for This is Spinal Tap, which is the real deal of satire. Director Casey Affleck follows his brother-in-law for more than a year after Phoenix's decision to retire from his successful acting career and become a hip-hop artist.

    The iconic, Nick-Nolte-like image of Phoenix with a beard and sunglasses, a sort of Blues Brother and Smith Brother all in one, is both hilarious and sad, depending on whether you believe the story of his retirement or see it as a smart marketing campaign for this film and his career. His expertly scoring blow and constantly smoking weed have an authentic air about them although a good actor could simulate. His abuse of his many paid assistants is accurate for a star but almost unbelievable for such a talented one (Walk the Line, Revolution Road). The poor quality of the sound and image makes it a Blair-Witch kin or a device to evoke realism.

    I am a disbeliever because although Phoenix convinces me he is sincere about retirement, the actual lack of talent he has, evidenced more than once in the film, leads me to think it's a finely-wrought hoax. No actor as smart as Phoenix could ever judge himself talented, especially as he forms a relationship with Sean Combs, one of the great rappers of our time and in the film a shrewd judge of Phoenix's sophomoric attempts. Phoenix's gig with Letterman, see quote at beginning, could have been a part of the hoax. Throwing up after a performance looked real enough.

    Phoenix could make himself into a minor rap artist if he wanted—witness his successful learning to play guitar and sing as Johnny Cash—yet it seems he prefers not to learn well just so he can fail and return into acting, where the dollars will follow.

    The title is instructive—does it mean the acting Phoenix is still here, or does it suggest his whole persona—musician and actor—is here. I don't know the answer; I just know my film critic side thinks it sees a con.

    If it is all true, Joaquin Phoenix will have time to get back to his real talent, acting. If not, he'll spend time mending a reputation he has willfully wrecked.
    EricNorcrossDotCom

    A great experiment in gauging the cost of being original...

    Society wants us in our place, whether we're big stars or the common worker. This is proof that even those on top of the world can fall if they try to do something original, unique and personally rewarding. With that said, I highly enjoyed this piece, although I can't say I expected to. I thought it would be a joke, something to laugh at and yes, while there were parts that were funny I couldn't help but to be taken aback by a message, whether intended or accidental: we are a mean society. our expectations are for us and not those around us. We are greedy. We laugh at others when maybe we're not supposed. We criticize when we shouldn't.

    This isn't a film about the actor/rapper in question - it's a film about us and the consensus: we're really bad people.

    -E
    8Two_Journeys

    Great acting in a convincing mockumentary

    This movie still catches many people on the wrong foot, as this hoax is so well implemented that it is hard to believe you aren't watching Phoenix completely loosing it. In reality this is great acting and great directing, and once you know this, the movie is hilariously funny and a sharp criticism of reality TV, Hollywood and show business.

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    Related interests

    Amy Poehler in Parks and Recreation (2009)
    Mockumentary
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Prince and Apollonia Kotero in Purple Rain (1984)
    Music

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The idea for the film came from Joaquin Phoenix's amazement at the way people believed that reality television shows were unscripted. By claiming to retire from acting, he and his brother-in-law Casey Affleck planned to make a film that "explored celebrity, and explored the relationship between the media and the consumers, and the celebrities themselves".
    • Goofs
      When Phoenix first meets Diddy in the hotel, he knocks on the door on the right side of the hall, then the camera switches and Diddy is opening the door on the left side of the hall. It can't just be a change in camera angle since the door is the last one on the hall.
    • Quotes

      Edward James Olmos: That's you, drops of water and you're on top of the mountain of success. But one day you start sliding down the mountain and you think wait a minute; I'm a mountain top water drop. I don't belong in this valley, this river, this low dark ocean with all these drops of water. Then one day it gets hot and you slowly evaporate into air, way up, higher than any mountain top, all the way to the heavens. Then you understand that it was at your lowest that you were closest to God. Life's a journey that goes round and round and the end is closest to the beginning. So if it's change you need, relish the journey.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: The Town/I'm Still Here/Easy A (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Cool Water
      Written by Royston Langdon

      Performed by Antony Langdon & Joaquin Phoenix

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    FAQ21

    • How long is I'm Still Here?Powered by Alexa
    • Is this a real documentary?
    • What's the song that plays at the very ending with Joaquin Phoenix in the river?
    • Which people were in on the hoax?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 16, 2010 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • I'm Still Here: The Lost Years of Joaquin Phoenix
    • Filming locations
      • Costa Rica
    • Production company
      • They Are Going to Kill Us Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $408,983
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $96,658
      • Sep 12, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $626,396
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 48m(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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