Diane (Limited Edition blu-ray with slipcover)

$30.50

Slipcover edition of Kent Jones’s Diane (2018) from The Film Desk’s blu-ray label.

Region A blu-ray, 95 min
Limited to 500 copies

Extras:
Director's commentary
Time and Space and Diane and Bobbie and Mary Kay and Andrea: two new video pieces by Kent Jones
On Diane: a new essay by Samy Burch (screenwriter of May December and Late Fame)
Review by Owen Gleiberman from Variety
Kent Jones Q&A conducted by Craig Keller
Theatrical trailer
English SDH subtitles

Diane, the soulful and lovingly crafted first narrative feature from Kent Jones, is a portrait of a late middle-aged woman (Mary Kay Place, for whom the part was written) and the physical and emotional landscape of her tightly knit world of family, friends and her troubled son (Jake Lacy). Time rushes by, heartbreak and devastating loss are quickly followed by regeneration and unexpected kindnesses, and everything is haunted and colored by memory and intimations of mortality. Meanwhile, life never stops. Jones, who has played a prominent role in the world of cinema and the consciousness of its history—as writer, programmer, festival director, foundation leader, screenwriter, documentarian and decades-long collaborator with Martin Scorsese—has created something new and rare: a film that moves and pulses with the rhythm of everyday life as lived by a woman who gives all of herself to others.

“A wise, captivating and continually surprising character study… You may not encounter a more achingly human character in a movie this year. Mary Kay Place commands nearly every frame with a kind of hard-bitten luminosity… There are encounters of such unexpected, benedictory beauty that you may wonder, at first, if they’re mere visions or dreams.” – Justin Chang, The Los Angeles Times

Slipcover edition of Kent Jones’s Diane (2018) from The Film Desk’s blu-ray label.

Region A blu-ray, 95 min
Limited to 500 copies

Extras:
Director's commentary
Time and Space and Diane and Bobbie and Mary Kay and Andrea: two new video pieces by Kent Jones
On Diane: a new essay by Samy Burch (screenwriter of May December and Late Fame)
Review by Owen Gleiberman from Variety
Kent Jones Q&A conducted by Craig Keller
Theatrical trailer
English SDH subtitles

Diane, the soulful and lovingly crafted first narrative feature from Kent Jones, is a portrait of a late middle-aged woman (Mary Kay Place, for whom the part was written) and the physical and emotional landscape of her tightly knit world of family, friends and her troubled son (Jake Lacy). Time rushes by, heartbreak and devastating loss are quickly followed by regeneration and unexpected kindnesses, and everything is haunted and colored by memory and intimations of mortality. Meanwhile, life never stops. Jones, who has played a prominent role in the world of cinema and the consciousness of its history—as writer, programmer, festival director, foundation leader, screenwriter, documentarian and decades-long collaborator with Martin Scorsese—has created something new and rare: a film that moves and pulses with the rhythm of everyday life as lived by a woman who gives all of herself to others.

“A wise, captivating and continually surprising character study… You may not encounter a more achingly human character in a movie this year. Mary Kay Place commands nearly every frame with a kind of hard-bitten luminosity… There are encounters of such unexpected, benedictory beauty that you may wonder, at first, if they’re mere visions or dreams.” – Justin Chang, The Los Angeles Times