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20,000 Days on Earth

  • 2014
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Nick Cave in 20,000 Days on Earth (2014)
Drama and reality combine in a fictitious 24 hours in the life of musician and international cultural icon Nick Cave.
Play trailer2:12
2 Videos
50 Photos
DocumentaryDramaMusic

Writer and musician Nick Cave marks his 20,000th day on the planet Earth.Writer and musician Nick Cave marks his 20,000th day on the planet Earth.Writer and musician Nick Cave marks his 20,000th day on the planet Earth.

  • Directors
    • Iain Forsyth
    • Jane Pollard
  • Writers
    • Nick Cave
    • Iain Forsyth
    • Jane Pollard
  • Stars
    • Nick Cave
    • Susie Bick
    • Warren Ellis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Iain Forsyth
      • Jane Pollard
    • Writers
      • Nick Cave
      • Iain Forsyth
      • Jane Pollard
    • Stars
      • Nick Cave
      • Susie Bick
      • Warren Ellis
    • 35User reviews
    • 142Critic reviews
    • 83Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 8 wins & 18 nominations total

    Videos2

    International Trailer
    Trailer 2:12
    International Trailer
    20000 Dias En La Tierra: Como Escribir Una Cancion (Spanish)
    Clip 1:44
    20000 Dias En La Tierra: Como Escribir Una Cancion (Spanish)
    20000 Dias En La Tierra: Como Escribir Una Cancion (Spanish)
    Clip 1:44
    20000 Dias En La Tierra: Como Escribir Una Cancion (Spanish)

    Photos50

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    + 46
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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Nick Cave
    Nick Cave
    • Nick Cave
    Susie Bick
    • Susie Cave
    • (as Susie Cave)
    Warren Ellis
    Warren Ellis
    • Warren Ellis
    Darian Leader
    • Darian Leader
    Ray Winstone
    Ray Winstone
    • Ray Winstone
    Blixa Bargeld
    Blixa Bargeld
    • Blixa Bargeld
    Kylie Minogue
    Kylie Minogue
    • Kylie Minogue
    Arthur Cave
    • Arthur Cave
    Earl Cave
    Earl Cave
    • Earl Cave
    Thomas Wydler
    • Thomas Wydler
    Martyn Casey
    • Martyn Casey
    Conway Savage
    Conway Savage
    • Conway Savage
    Jim Sclavunos
    Jim Sclavunos
    • Jim Sclavunos
    Barry Adamson
    • Barry Adamson
    George Vjestica
    • George Vjestica
    Rachel Willis
    • Nick Cave's Assistant
    • (voice)
    Lizzie Phillips
    Lizzie Phillips
    • Darren Leader's assistant
    Peter Stonehm
    • Delivery man
    • Directors
      • Iain Forsyth
      • Jane Pollard
    • Writers
      • Nick Cave
      • Iain Forsyth
      • Jane Pollard
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    7.412.2K
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    Featured reviews

    Red_Identity

    Fascinating

    The only thing I've been introduced with when it comes to Nick Cave is his score for The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, which is pretty much my favorite film score ever. Such soothing, haunting, mesmerizing music. In many ways, this film is exactly like that. I always find it interesting when filmmakers play around with what a documentary really is, and this does just that. It's very melancholic in its tone, very introspective. It has fascinating examples of music being created and just how much Cave puts himself into his music, while still balancing it all and not coming off like an ego project. Even for non-fans this is recommended.
    7rooee

    He came along this road

    We open with Nick Cave in bed. Soon he's half-naked before the mirror. But this semi-staged documentary is no warts-and-all exposé. The lighting is kind to Cave's boyish body, and his voice-over is as precisely prepared as it is passionate and poetic. This rehearsed vulnerability sets the tone for how directors Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard will portray their elusive subject.

    Their approach provides Cave with an appropriate level of control. Control is essential to the process of self-mythologising. Cave is aware that myth is what gives popular artists their enduring legacy. It's not dishonesty. Myth contains truth: the truth of how art (and the artist) makes us feel, the senses it triggers and the images it conjures. And what images Cave has conjured over the decades; from surreal punk, through broken Americana, through dark ballads and blaring gospel rock and a parade of delicious dirges.

    The focus on the recording of Push the Sky Away means we hear very little of The Bad Seeds' earlier work. We glimpse The Birthday Party (and a very amusing vignette it is). But Cave and his myriad members have gone through various phases, and we get no sense of these because we hear nothing of them. Do not go into this film expecting a retrospective. Do not expect chronology, or even much revelation. Do not expect to bring a virginal friend and open their eyes to the strange, bleak, sentimental narratives of Brighton's finest immigrant. And yet it is a film for virtually everyone; for those harbouring an idea and a glimmer of interest in the creative method.

    You'll know from the trailer that Ray Winstone and Kylie Minogue drop by for a ride in Cave's car. These scenes are more than just elaborate name-drops. They're framed as natural exchanges perhaps imagined or drawn from memory. Most moving is the conversation with ex-Bad Seed Blixa Bargeld, which has the air of some latent regret being cauterised.

    Toward the beginning of the film there are a number of intense dialogues between Cave and the psychoanalyst Darian Leader. These scenes are deeply intimate and engaging, and it's a pity they fall away. It's indicative of the broader sense that 20,000 Days is truncated. Surely there's more footage. There is, surely, a three-hour edit of this movie, just as compelling and original and humorous. Yes, this is a double-edged criticism.

    Elegantly shot and exquisitely edited, there's warmth in every frame of this movie, whether we're in the archives, scouring scuzzy photographs from Cave's youth, or in the pleasingly chaotic space surrounding the typewriter of dreams. Forsyth and Pollard carefully walk the line between hagiography and dehumanisation: Cave comes off as neither a fallen angel nor a mad recluse. But he does emerge an enigma. And that's okay, because that's how the man himself reckons we like our rock stars: slightly unreal, swaggering and contradictory, and bigger than God. I'm inclined to agree.
    9markgorman

    Is this the greatest ever music movie? Maybe.

    Nick Cave is a very special musician. In fact musician may be the wrong descriptor.

    He's a very special writer that specialises in music. He has Warren Ellis and his many collaborators to dial up the music side of the equation.

    in this documentary, that looks like a movie, that, yes, he co-wrote, you find yourself immersed in the mind of a genius for an hour and a half as he discusses his life, his loves, his inspirations and his deep internal psychology in something approaching forensic detail.

    He is a very beautiful man.

    He talks painfully honestly at times about everything that is true to him. His 'muse' - his wife Susie who lies, back turned to camera in bed with him as the film opens.

    We see half glimpses, stolen moments, of her off and on through the film but little more. We see a photo of her projected on the wall of his archivist's office.

    She is as beautiful as he is.

    Later we see Cave guzzle pizza with their twin sons, arm around the shoulders of one of them, devoid of comment/emotion, almost voyeuristically. It also spells L.O.V.E.

    We see him kiss Warren Ellis full square on the lips as he visits his musical 'muse' on the occasion of a casual lunch of eels in black pasta. More love.

    Cave carries an aura of love around with him. Yet he's often labelled with hate (partly because of the baggage of The Birthday Party have burdened him with. Grinderman, in this respect cannot help.)

    We see him in the recording studio.

    Gold dust. (Watching drummer Thomas Wydler as he twitches and mouths the rhythms is mesmeric.)

    We see him crafting lyrics.

    Gold dust. (His notebooks are works of art in their own right.)

    We see him performing live.

    Now, this is the thing. Anyone who has been to a Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds gig knows that no band on earth put in the same level of emotional commitment to their music; (perhaps with the exception of his faux-misogyny project Grinderman) Ellis all crazy violin fury, Cave all emotional connection.

    It's this latter point that made the movie for me. He talks about how he ensnares individual audience members and then demonstrates it with a live performance of Higgs Boson Blues that reduced his female 'victim' to tears.

    Me too. It was all too much. All too emotionally engrossing.

    And then there's the craft...the soundtrack (obviously) the direction and the cinematography are all sublime. A special shout out has to go for editor, Jonathan Amos.

    And the cameos; Kylie, Ray Winstone and Blixa Bargeld.

    I'm left with a tantalising question. Is this the greatest film ever made about music?

    I think it has claims on that. Notwithstanding School of Rock.

    Nick Cave. {I love you man.)
    8wandereramor

    Nick Cave is a pretty cool guy

    The world abounds with concert films and other documentaries with no greater ambition than following a famous person around for a while. These films are usually easy to put in the "superfans only" category. But maybe that wouldn't be the case if they were more like 20, 000 Days on Earth. All I can say is that, as someone who has one Nick Cave album but no vast devotion to the guy, I was entertained throughout.

    Part of this is simply the beauty of the images -- the directors make even the most mundane scene stun on the screen. The film takes place across one mostly ordinary day in Nick Cave's life, purportedly the 20000th, and much of the runtime is taken up by fascinating conversations Cave has with friends and collaborators. There are a lot of stagey scenes that don't hide their constructedness, such as a filmed therapy session, or a meta- cinematic moment where at the behest of the film's producers Cage goes through old pictures that will soon become part of the opening montage. And then there is the obligatory concert footage, shot in a dynamic fashion that manages to pick up all of Cave's subtle interactions with the front row and the looks of desperate adoration on the audience's faces.

    All of this would be for naught if Cave wasn't a fascinating subject. He plays the brooding poet here, providing ominous narration throughout the film, but there are also humanizing scenes where he watches TV with his sons or grumpily bosses around a children's choir (one of the more surreal moments here). It may be more charisma than intellect, but damn if I couldn't listen to Nick Cave talk for days. For all the directorial skill brought to 20, 000 Days on Earth, its greatest virtue may be in simply allowing us to experience two hours of Cave.
    8stuartfsmith

    Masterfully written, sequenced and shot. Gripping and powerful

    The movie had a raw feel about it, an honest look at the creative process from the perspective of Nick Cave. It opened up a line of thoughts (as an aspiring musician) that transformed, inspired, questioned and transcended my way of writing. The pace of the movie was far from slow, (though obviously nor was it fast paced), it almost reflected Cave's musical writing style, a kind of creeping epic crescendo. The movie didn't fail to completely grip my friend, who I'd rate highly in terms of his cinematic knowledge (working in the industry), despite the fact that he hasn't really been exposed to much of Cave's work.

    The cinematography was beautiful, with extremely unique transitions that somehow flowed scene to scene. The soundtrack was obviously excellent, with some stirring performances, I'm fairly certain there were a few slightly teary eyes in the cinema. Nick Cave was simultaneously eccentric, enigmatic yet very down to earth and heartfelt. I did feel his heartbeat.

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    Related interests

    Dziga Vertov in Man with a Movie Camera (1929)
    Documentary
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    Drama
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    Music

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Quotes

      Nick Cave: To act on a bad idea is better than to not act at all, because the worth of the idea never becomes apparent until you do it.

    • Crazy credits
      The credits are shown over a twilight scene of Brighton, shot from the sea.
    • Connections
      Features The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)
    • Soundtracks
      Can't Get You Out of My Head
      Written by Cathy Dennis and Rob Davis (as Robert Davis)

      Performed by Kylie Minogue

      Published by EMI Music Publishing Ltd and Universal/MCA Music Ltd

      Licensed courtesy of Parlophone Records Ltd

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 18, 2014 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Showtimes
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dünyada 20,000 Gün
    • Filming locations
      • Brighton, East Sussex, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Corniche Media
      • British Film Institute (BFI)
      • Film4
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $279,558
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $27,879
      • Sep 21, 2014
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,128,486
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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