City of Ghosts

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City of Ghosts

A lobby card for the Thailand theatrical release in 2004. Screenings were limited to the Lido cinemas in Bangkok.
Directed by Matt Dillon
Produced by Willi Baer,
Michael Cerenzie,
Deepak Nayar
Written by Matt Dillon,
Barry Gifford,
Mike Jones
Starring Matt Dillon,
James Caan,
Natascha McElhone,
Gérard Depardieu,
Kem Sereyvuth,
Stellan Skarsgård
Music by Tyler Bates
Cinematography Jim Denault
Editing by Howard E. Smith
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) United States 25 April 2003 (limited)
Running time 116 min.
Country USA
Language English, French,
Khmer, Russian
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

City of Ghosts is a 2002 drama film co-written, directed by and starring Matt Dillon, about a con artist who must go to Cambodia to collect his share in money collected from an insurance scam. The film was made in Cambodia, in locations that include Phnom Penh and the Bokor Hill Station.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Jimmy is a conman who's been working for a fake insurance company in New York City that is being investigated by the FBI after it cannot pay claims that have poured in after a hurricane. Discovering that Jimmy's mentor and the mastermind of the scheme, Marvin, has skipped the country and gone to Thailand, Jimmy boards a plane with the intention of trying to collect his money.

Once in Bangkok, Jimmy meets Joseph Kaspar, a partner in the scheme who's living with his Thai katoey companion Rocky. Joseph informs Jimmy that Marvin has moved on to Cambodia, where he's planning an even greater scam. So Jimmy sneaks across the border and makes his way to Phnom Penh.

He checks into a seedy hotel run by a Frenchman named Emile and has his sunglasses stolen by a macaque.

Needing to travel around, he hires a cyclo driver named Sok, who becomes the only person Jimmy can trust. He also meets an NGO worker named Sophie and dabbles in romance with her while attending a rave party at an ancient temple.

Eventually, Marvin turns up, but the scam he's trying to get together – involving corrupt Cambodian government officials, high-ranking military and the Russian mafia – turns out to be more risky and dangerous than anyone ever imagined, taking Jimmy on a surreal odyssey.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Production

[edit] Locations in Cambodia

[edit] Casting in Cambodia

  • Kem Sereyvuth, the cyclo driver who played Sok, was cast in Cambodia. He had no prior acting experience. The story his character tells Jimmy is his own.
  • In one scene in the hotel bar, a character, Harry the American expat, tells Jimmy in no uncertain terms that he's a fool and doesn't know what he's getting into. Harry was portrayed by Michael Hayes, the publisher of the Phnom Penh Post, a fortnightly English-language newspaper.
  • The macaque that stole Jimmy's sunglasses was named Jadet, who was smuggled in from Thailand because the Cambodian monkey was not tame and "bit a chunk out of the prop lady's ear," Dillon told Time Asia. "The Thai monkey escaped, and its trainer was yelling at these kids who gathered around not to chase it. Of course, every kid in Cambodia went after that monkey, and it ran into the post office where things really got nuts."
  • The people at the full moon party, as well as some of those on Emile's balcony, are all actually backpackers recruited from Phnom Penh hostels.

[edit] Soundtrack

Music from the Motion Picture City of Ghosts
Music from the Motion Picture City of Ghosts cover
Soundtrack by various artists
Released April 29, 2003
Genre Soundtrack
Label Lakeshore S
Professional reviews

The soundtrack for City of Ghosts features an eclectic mix of music that includes 1970s Khmer rock and roll, French pop and American pre-WWII blues and jazz. The album contains the following tracks:

  1. "Both Sides Now" – written by Joni Mitchell; performed by Dengue Fever
  2. "Et Moi, Et Moi, Et Moi" – written by Jacques Dutronc and Jacques Lanzmann; performed by Jacques Dutronc
  3. "Wait Ten Months" – performed by Ros Sereysothea
  4. "Sak Kra Va" performed by Chan Chaya
  5. "Do You Believe In Love At Sight" – performed by McKinney's Cotton Pickers
  6. "Hilo Hula" – performed by Mike Hanapi and the Llima Islanders
  7. "Have You Seen My Love" – performed by Ros Sereysothea
  8. "Parlez Moi D'amour" – performed Lucianne Boyer
  9. "I Want A Little Girl" – performed by McKinney's Cotton Pickers
  10. "Mou Pei Na" – performed by Sinn Sisamouth
  11. "Coining" – performed by Maes Samouen
  12. "Giant Woman" – performed by Pan Ron
  13. "Close Fit Blues" – performed by Clarence Williams
  14. "I'm Sixteen" – performed by Ros Sereysothea
  15. "Ne Te Fache Pas" – performed by Sinn Sisamouth
  16. "Love Pillow" – performed by Choun Malai
  17. "Dear 5" – performed by Peter Whitehead

In the film, James Caan performed a song in Khmer, but it's not on the soundtrack CD.

[edit] References

[edit] External links