Jim Jarmusch’s anonymous anti-hero hitman (French-Ivorian actor Isaach De Bankolé), identified in the credits of The Limits of Control as the Lone Man, exists only in terms of his unspecified mission.
Jim Jarmusch begins his film The Limits of Control, the tale of a hitman who doesn’t seem to hit, with a quote from the first two lines of Arthur Rimbaud’s poem “The Drunken Boat.” Some may see this ...
Is the beginning even the beginning? It’s a question I posed in my head about halfway through Jim Jarmusch’s The Limits of Control, first literally and later philosophically. Structured as a series of ...
Jim Jarmusch’s anonymous antihero hitman (French-Ivorian actor Isaach De Bankolé), identified in the credits of The Limits of Control as the Lone Man, exists only in terms of his unspecified mission.
Jim Jarmusch’s “The Limits of Control” led the specialty box office this weekend, according to estimates provided by Rentrak. The Focus Features release – described by indieWIRE‘s Michael Koresky as ...
Jim Jarmusch's anonymous antihero hitman (French-Ivorian actor Isaach De Bankolé), identified in the credits of The Limits of Control as the Lone Man, exists only in terms of his unspecified mission.