James R. Jarmusch

James R. Jarmusch net worth is $5 Million. Also know about James R. Jarmusch bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

James R. Jarmusch Wiki Biography

James Roberto “Jim” Jarmusch (/ˈdʒɑrməʃ/; born January 22, 1953) is an American independent film director, screenwriter, actor, producer, editor and composer. Jarmusch has consistently been a major proponent of independent cinema since the 1980s. IMDB Wikipedia $5 million 1953 1953-1-22 6′ 2″ (1.88 m) Actor Aquarius Broken Flowers (2005) Columbia University Cuyahoga Falls Dead Man (1995) Director Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999) Isgyvena tik mylintys (2013) James R. Jarmusch January 22 Jim Jarmusch Net Worth Ohio United States Writer

James R. Jarmusch Quick Info

Full Name Jim Jarmusch
Net Worth $5 Million
Date Of Birth January 22, 1953
Died February 13, 2017, Kuala Lumpur International Airport, Sepang District, Malaysia
Place Of Birth Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, United States
Height 6′ 2″ (1.88 m)
Profession Director, Actor, Writer
Education Columbia University
Nationality American, American
Spouse Kanye West, Kris Humphries, Damon Thomas, 18. Heaven Opposed to Hell, 17. Diamonds Are a Ghoul’s Best Friend, 16. I Hate the High Road
Siblings Tom Jarmusch, Ann Jarmusch
Partner Sara Driver, Sara Driver
IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000464
Awards Cannes Grand Prix, Short Film Palme d’Or, European Film Award for Best Non-European Film, Bodil Award for Best American Film, Gotham Independent Film Tribute Award
Nominations Independent Spirit Award for Best Feature, Independent Spirit Award for Best Screenplay, Independent Spirit Award for Best Director, César Award for Best Foreign Film, Gotham Independent Film Award for Best Feature Film, British Independent Film Award for Best International Independent Film, Nation…
Movies Only Lovers Left Alive, Paterson, Dead Man, Down by Law, Stranger Than Paradise, Broken Flowers, Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai, Mystery Train, Night on Earth, Permanent Vacation, The Limits of Control, Gimme Danger, Coffee and Cigarettes, Year of the Horse, Ten Minutes Older: The Trumpet, Blue i…
TV Shows Fishing with John

James R. Jarmusch Trademarks

  1. Japanese tourist
  2. Country music on soundtrack
  3. Sense of place/historical figures from movie’s location
  4. Offscreen distant train whistle
  5. Introvert character eavesdrops on two strangers’ conversations
  6. The narrative structure of his films mostly lack clear plot progression and focus more on mood and character development
  7. Salt & pepper hair
  8. Often casts musicians as actors in his films
  9. Stationary camera (deadpan). His films often involve travlers as well as life after midnight. Shows and views the American landscape from a non-commercial viewpoint (e.g. the tavern were everybody knows your name instead of franchised stripmalls)

James R. Jarmusch Quotes

  • You see, I start with actors that I want to make a character for. Then I collect a whole lot of details and then I sit down with them and make a connect the dots drawing out of them; see what for of picture it is becoming. I don’t know what the story is or where it’s going, at all. I just sort of jump in and start. In fact, I think I do it backwards. Most people have a story idea and in the end they cast it, but I start with the actors first.
  • [on aging] Gee. I don’t know. I don’t know how to even answer that. It was funny: I was getting in the car two days ago in New York to go to the airport, and there was a lot of traffic so we couldn’t go on the highway. The driver wanted to go through the back streets of Brooklyn and Queens and it was a Saturday afternoon, a very beautiful day. And I’m riding there and possibly going to be late and I didn’t worry. I don’t know why. And I was just watching people doing little things – a guy fixing his door, little kids chasing a ball and adults chasing children that were laughing, people that were going shopping, a couple arguing on a corner – and I just felt like, sometimes, the world is perfect just because this is what it is. Maybe I wouldn’t have felt exactly that same thing some years ago.
  • …the beauty of a movie is that you walk in, you don’t know anything about it, you enter a world that’s new to you, and that’s the magic of being transported. If you make a film, that magic is not there, because you were there while shooting it. After writing a film and shooting it and being in the editing room every day, you can never see it clearly. I think other people’s perception of your film is more valid than your own, because they have that ability to see it for the first time.
  • [on Paterson] In the film I wanted to make this little structure to be a metaphor for life, that every day is a variation on the day before or the day coming up. They’re just variations.
  • [on the the funniest criticism he’s ever had] My favorite? I’ll translate it from the French. It was from a right-wing newspaper in the South of France about my movie Down by Law, which said, “Jim Jarmusch is celebrated by the French intelligentsia in a way that’s reminiscent of deaf and dumb parents applauding their retarded child. He is 33 years old. This is the age that Christ was crucified on the cross. We can only hope for the same for the future of his film career.” Woah! I used to carry that one around in my wallet.
  • I am attracted to non-dramatic moments in life.
  • Robby Müller, I learned so much from this man about filmmaking, about a lot of things, about life in general and about light and about recording things and about capturing things in-the-moment and about trusting instincts. Robby and I had a really wonderful way of working: No storyboard, a shot list only if really necessary for ourselves. I still don’t like making a shot list each day when I’m working. Robby’s idea is about instincts, trusting your instinct and your intuition and Robby would always say things like: ‘Of course we can plan everything in advance and when we go to that location it’s a different time of day, the light is different, the clouds are different, so why would we cling to the idea we had previously? We must always be on our feet. Think on your feet.’ And we did a lot of interesting things while scouting for this film together which was: We find the most dramatic, incredibly beautiful landscape you could imagine and then we would turn our backs on it and film the other way. [audience laughs] That was something that Robby said: ‘Look how magnificent this is, we’ve seen it in a fucking calender! Let’s look over there, it’s a small tree and a rock, very sad and emotional, you know?’ [audience laughs] So we would film that instead. And this is just one example of the kind of way that Robby thinks. And I learned so much from him, thinking that way. Don’t look for the obvious, always keep your eyes open , keep thinking on your feet. Shooting a film is a process and you can’t control everything in the process, so be open. Another thing Robby taught me was: O.K., you’re shooting a scene outside and suddenly it starts raining. And most crews would say: ‘Well, the scene doesn’t take place in the rain, so let’s pack up and we’ll have to stop for today’. And Robby would be: ‘I wonder what it would be like, if the scene’s in the rain. Maybe it’s much better’. Or if we already shot some of it: ‘O.K. think of some dialogue where they say it’s about the rain, you know?’ Like, keep thinking, keep thinking, don’t be set in your script. It’s something that came from Nicholas Ray, who said: ‘If you just gonna shoot the script then why bother?’ And that’s something Robby also instilled in me. Robby Müller is a kind of brilliant man who’s a very rebellious teenager in part of his spirit and yet an incredibly technically gifted person.[Lincoln Center, April 2014]
  • I’ve always been drawn to outsider types of characters, so what more perfect shadowy inhabitants of the margins there than vampires?
  • [on his approach to cinema] When you make these films they do walk on their own after a certain point. Often, when I’m writing dialogue in a script, whatever’s on paper for me is a sketch until you film it. It’s not like I’m making them say words. I feel like I’m just transcribing what they’re saying.
  • [on working with Tilda Swinton] She’s just one of the most fantastic people I know. She is full of creativity, she’s open, she’s incredibly knowledgeable about so many things. She’s like the bohemian goddess of our lifetime.
  • I have no desire to make films for any kind of specific audience. What I want to do is make films that… tell stories, but somehow in an new way, not in a predictable form, not in the usual manipulative way that films seem to on their audiences.
  • Nothing is original. Steal from anywhere that resonates with inspiration or fuels your imagination. Devour old films, new films, music, books, paintings, photographs, poems, dreams, random conversations, architecture, bridges, street signs, trees, clouds, bodies of water, light and shadows. Select only things to steal from that speak directly to your soul. If you do this, your work (and theft) will be authentic. Authenticity is invaluable; originality is nonexistent. And don’t bother concealing your thievery – celebrate it if you feel like it. In any case, always remember what Jean-Luc Godard said: “It’s not where you take things from – it’s where you take them to.”
  • The beauty of life is in small details, not in big events.
  • It’s great that the audience have their own different takes on what they have just seen, and don’t know all the answers. Often, I don’t know all the answers either.
  • I am interested in the non-dramatic moments in life. I’m not at all attracted to making films that are about drama. A few years back, I saw a biopic about a famous American abstract expressionist artist. And you know what? It really horrified me. All they did was reduce his life to the big dramatic moments you could pick out of any biography. If that’s supposed to be a portrait of somebody, I just don’t get it. It’s so reductive. It just seems all wrong to me.
  • Aw, man, is that the only adjective they know? It’s like every time I make a goddamn movie, the word “quirky” is hauled out in the American reviews. Now I see it’s being applied to Wes Anderson, too. All of a sudden, his films are quirky. And Sofia Coppola is quirky. It’s just so goddamn lazy.
  • I never talk to actors as a group. Only one at a time. I talk to them about being their characters. Never, ever, about the meaning of the scene. I don’t want the actors overladen with research, so they grow stale.
  • I’m stubborn. I have to fight. The studios want to be your partner in the creative process. That’s why I find most of my financing overseas. I don’t let the Money give me notes on my scripts. I don’t allow the Money on the set. I don’t allow the Money in the editing room. These days, even the little independent studios, they act like Hollywood. Some kid is making a movie for $500,000, and they want the final cut. Seems like the squares are taking over everything.
  • I’m happiest when I’m shooting the movie. Filming is like sex. Writing the script is like seduction, then shooting is like sex because you’re doing the movie with other people. Editing is like being pregnant, and then you give birth and they take your baby away. After this process is done, I will watch the movie one more time with a paying audience that doesn’t know I’m there, and then I will never see it again. I’m so sick of it.
  • I prefer to be subcultural rather than mass-cultural. I’m not interested in hitting the vein of the mainstream.
  • I feel so lucky. During the late 70’s in New York, anything seemed possible. You could make a movie or a record and work part time, and you could find an apartment for 160 bucks a month. And the conversations were about ideas. No one was talking about money. It was pretty amazing. But looking back is dangerous. I don’t like nostalgia. But, still, damn, it was fun. I’m glad I was there.
  • I consider myself a dilettante in a positive way, and I always have. That affects my sense of filmmaking.
  • I know. It’s all so . . . independent. I’m so sick of that word. I reach for my revolver when I hear the word ‘quirky.’ Or ‘edgy.’ Those words are now becoming labels that are slapped on products to sell them. Anyone who makes a film that is the film they want to make, and it is not defined by marketing analysis or a commercial enterprise, is independent. My movies are kind of made by hand. They’re not polished — they’re sort of built in the garage. It’s more like being an artisan in some way.

James R. Jarmusch Important Facts

  • Stated that his goal was “to approximate real time for the audience.”.
  • Novelist Paul Auster described the characters in Jarmusch’s films as “laconic, withdrawn, sorrowful mumblers”.
  • Is a member of rock band SQÜRL with film associate Carter Logan and sound engineer Shane Stoneback.
  • Always owns the negatives of his films.
  • Stopped drinking coffee in 1986, the year of the first installment of Coffee and Cigarettes, though he continues to smoke cigarettes.
  • Often described as the archetypal auteur of American independent film.
  • Is a founding member of The Sons of Lee Marvin, a humorous “semi-secret society” of artists resembling the iconic actor.
  • Likes seeing his films once, with a paying audience that doesn’t know he is there, after that he doesn’t want to see them ever again.
  • According to Roger Ebert, ‘there is a deep embedding of comedy, nostalgia, shabby sadness and visual beauty’ in his work.
  • Guest with Johnny Depp of Belgrade Film Festival FEST in 1992.
  • Founder member of “the Sons of Lee Marvin”. Other members include Tom Waits, Thurston Moore, John Lurie, Nick Cave. Membership requires a plausible likeness to Lee Marvin such that you could be rumored to be his son.
  • At college one of his professors was cult director Nicholas Ray. They formed a friendship and Jarmusch became his assistant for the making of a film.
  • Has lived with his girlfriend, filmmaker Sara Driver, for 20 years. [2005]
  • Although Broken Flowers (2005) came out after Lost in Translation (2003), Jarmusch wrote the script exclusively for Bill Murray before Sofia Coppola.
  • Father worked at the Goodrich tire plant in Akron, Ohio. Mother reviewed films for the Akron Beacon Journal.
  • He owns the negatives to all his own films, except one, Year of the Horse (1997), which he made for Neil Young.
  • Doesn’t allow his movies to be dubbed for foreign movie markets. They are mostly shown with subtitles in other countries.
  • Once almost died from eating wild mushrooms, which resulted in an interest in the study of mushroom.
  • Attended Columbia University.
  • Up until 2005, has never made a film under a studio’s watch.
  • Good friend of Aki Kaurismäki, Finnish director of The Man Without a Past (2002). Placed the final segment of his movie Night on Earth (1991) in Finland with the three characters speaking Finnish.
  • Is the older brother of Ann and Tom Jarmusch.
  • Chris Parker, who starred in Jarmusch’s first film Permanent Vacation (1980) was a friend of Jarmusch’s and had never acted before (according to a 2/2/94 interview with Jarmusch). When Jarmusch submitted “Permanent Vacation” to Tisch as his film thesis/project, they wouldn’t accept it – apparently, they didn’t think it was worth their time.
  • On Feb. 2, 1994, Jarmusch appeared for an interview before an audience on the first night of a retrospective of his films held by the Walker Art Museum in Minneapolis, MN.

James R. Jarmusch Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
Gimme Danger 2016 Documentary Director
Paterson 2016 directed by Director
Only Lovers Left Alive 2013 Director
The Limits of Control 2009 Director
Broken Flowers 2005 Director
Coffee and Cigarettes 2003 Director
Ten Minutes Older: The Trumpet 2002 segment “Int. Trailer Night” Director
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai 1999 Director
Year of the Horse 1997 Documentary Director
Dead Man 1995 Director
Coffee and Cigarettes III 1993 Short Director
Night on Earth 1991 Director
Red Hot and Blue 1990 TV Movie segment “It’s All Right With Me” Director
Mystery Train 1989 Director
Coffee and Cigarettes II 1989 Short Director
Talking Heads: Storytelling Giant 1988 Video Director
Coffee and Cigarettes 1986 Short Director
Down by Law 1986 Director
Stranger Than Paradise 1984 Director
Stranger Than Paradise 1983 Short Director
Permanent Vacation 1980 Director
The Limits of Control 2009 written by Writer
Broken Flowers 2005 written by Writer
Coffee and Cigarettes 2003 written by Writer
Ten Minutes Older: The Trumpet 2002 segment “Int. Trailer Night” Writer
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai 1999 written by Writer
Dead Man 1995 written by Writer
Night on Earth 1991 written by Writer
Mystery Train 1989 written by Writer
Coffee and Cigarettes II 1989 Short writer Writer
Coffee and Cigarettes 1986 Short Writer
Down by Law 1986 written by Writer
Stranger Than Paradise 1984 written by Writer
You Are Not I 1981 Writer
Permanent Vacation 1980 written by Writer
Gimme Danger 2016 Documentary writer Writer
Paterson 2016 written by Writer
Only Lovers Left Alive 2013 written by Writer
Bored to Death 2009 TV Series Jim Jarmusch Actor
The Simpsons 2008 TV Series Jim Jarmusch Actor
V.I.P. 2001 TV Series Jim Jarmusch Actor
SpongeBob SquarePants 2000 TV Series Jim Jarmusch Actor
Cannes Man 1997 Jim Jarmusch Actor
Sling Blade 1996 Frostee Cream Boy Actor
Blue in the Face 1995 Bob Actor
Iron Horsemen 1994 Silver Rider Actor
In the Soup 1992 Monty Actor
The Golden Boat 1990 Stranger Actor
Leningrad Cowboys Go America 1989 Car Dealer / New York Actor
Helsinki Napoli All Night Long 1987 Barkeeper #2 Actor
Candy Mountain 1987 uncredited Actor
Straight to Hell 1986 Amos Dade Actor
American Autobahn 1984 Movie Producer Actor
Fräulein Berlin 1984 Jim Jarmusch Actor
Porto 2016 executive producer Producer
Uncle Howard 2016/I Documentary executive producer Producer
Explicit Ills 2008 executive producer Producer
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai 1999 producer Producer
When Pigs Fly 1993 executive producer Producer
Night on Earth 1991 producer Producer
You Are Not I 1981 producer Producer
Permanent Vacation 1980 producer Producer
Paterson 2016 original music written and performed by Composer
Jim Jarmusch & Jozef Van Wissem: The Sun of the Natural World Is Pure Fire 2012 Short Composer
The State of Things 1982 Composer
Permanent Vacation 1980 Composer
Coffee and Cigarettes 2003 segment “Somewhere in California” Editor
Coffee and Cigarettes III 1993 Short Editor
Stranger Than Paradise 1984 Editor
Permanent Vacation 1980 Editor
Year of the Horse 1997 Documentary Cinematographer
Sleepwalk 1986 Cinematographer
You Are Not I 1981 Cinematographer
Burroughs: The Movie 1983 Documentary sound recordist Sound Department
Arena 1983 TV Series documentary sound recordist – 1 episode Sound Department
Underground U.S.A. 1980 sound recordist Sound Department
Sleepwalk 1986 camera operator Camera Department
Only Lovers Left Alive 2013 musician – as SQÜRL Music Department
Gimme Danger 2016 Documentary writer: “Wind Across The Everglades”, “MassExtinction#6”, “Broken Contract” Soundtrack
Lightning Over Water 1980 Documentary observer Miscellaneous
Parched 2014 Short special thanks Thanks
Prevertere 2013 special thanks Thanks
A Fuller Life 2013 Documentary special thanks Thanks
Cove Road 2012 very special thanks Thanks
For Ellen 2012 thank you Thanks
Noch’ Naprolyot 2011 Short acknowledgment Thanks
Genau 2011 thanks Thanks
If I Needed Someone 2010 Short special thanks Thanks
Window on Your Present 2010 grateful acknowledgment Thanks
Prime of Your Life 2010 special thanks Thanks
Idiots and Angels 2008 special thanks Thanks
Explicit Ills 2008 special thanks Thanks
The Elevator Storeys 2006 Short special thanks Thanks
La tigre e la neve 2005 thanks Thanks
Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room 2005 Documentary special thanks Thanks
Independent Lens 2005 TV Series documentary special thanks – 1 episode Thanks
Clerks 1994 special thanks: for leading the way Thanks
Love Four 1994 Video acknowledgment: super duper extra special thanks to Thanks
American Dream 1990 Documentary grateful thanks Thanks
Uncle Howard 2016/I Documentary Himself Self
Park Bench with Steve Buscemi 2015 TV Series Himself Self
Hot Sugar’s Cold World 2015 Documentary Himself Self
Citizen Kat 2014 Documentary short Himself Self
Travelling at Night with Jim Jarmusch 2014 Documentary Self
Cinema 3 1987-2014 TV Series Himself Self
Red Carpet 2014/I Himself (uncredited) Self
NYFF51 2013 Short Himself Self
Song from the Forest 2013 Documentary Himself Self
Backstage Baby 2013 Documentary short Himself Self
Picasso Baby: A Performance Art Film 2013 TV Movie documentary Himself – Filmmaker Self
Don’t Expect Too Much 2011 Documentary Himself Self
Behind Jim Jarmusch 2010 Documentary Himself Self
Sodankylä ikuisesti 2010 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Blank City 2010 Documentary Self
Zigag diario 2010 TV Series Himself Self
Días de cine 2009 TV Series Himself Self
Reel Injun 2009 Documentary Himself Self
No Wave – Underground ’80: Berlin – New York 2009 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Burning Down the House: The Story of CBGB 2009 Documentary Himself Self
40 x 15 2008 Documentary Himself Self
Farmhouse: Jim Jarmusch at Work 2008 Documentary short Himself Self
Joe Strummer: The Future Is Unwritten 2007 Documentary Himself Self
In Bed with Carrie 2007 TV Series Himself Self
Ceremonia de clausura – 54º festival internacional de cine de San Sebastián 2006 TV Movie Himself Self
Die Invasion der Ideen 2006 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The 15th Annual Gotham Awards 2005 TV Special Himself – Recipient Self
El Magacine 2005 TV Series Himself Self
Punk: Attitude 2005 Documentary Himself Self
Excavating Taylor Mead 2005 Documentary Himself Self
Z Channel: A Magnificent Obsession 2004 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Rockets Redglare! 2003 Documentary Himself Self
Hollywood High 2003 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Chaplin Today: A King in New York 2003 TV Short documentary Himself Self
¿Quién es Alejandro Chomski? 2002 Documentary Himself Self
Focus on Jim Jarmusch 2002 TV Movie Himself Self
The 2001 IFP/West Independent Spirit Awards 2001 TV Special Himself Self
Screamin’ Jay Hawkins: I Put a Spell on Me 2001 Documentary Himself Self
Film-Fest DVD: Issue 3 – Toronto 2000 Video documentary Himself Self
Pop Odyssee 2 – House of the Rising Punk 1998 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Lee Marvin: A Personal Portrait by John Boorman 1998 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Space Ghost Coast to Coast 1998 TV Series Himself Self
Divine Trash 1998 Documentary Himself Self
We’re Outta Here! 1997 Video documentary Himself Self
Year of the Horse 1997 Documentary Himself Self
R.I.P., Rest in Pieces 1997 Documentary Himself Self
The Typewriter, the Rifle & the Movie Camera 1996 Documentary Himself Self
American Cinema 1995 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Tigrero: A Film That Was Never Made 1994 Documentary Himself Self
Cinefile: Made in the USA 1993 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
Fishing with John 1991 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Self
The Media Show 1988 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Sassi nello stagno 2016 Documentary Archive Footage
Cinema mil 2005 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Sendung ohne Namen 2003 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage

James R. Jarmusch Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2014 Halfway Award International Online Cinema Awards (INOCA) Best Original Screenplay Only Lovers Left Alive (2013) Won
2013 ICS Cannes Award International Cinephile Society Awards Best Director Only Lovers Left Alive (2013) Won
2013 Special Prize of the Jury Sitges – Catalonian International Film Festival Only Lovers Left Alive (2013) Won
2011 Officer of the Order of Arts and Letters Order of Arts and Letters, France On June 23, 2011. Won
2008 Golden Coach Cannes Film Festival Won
2006 Czech Lion Czech Lions Best Foreign Language Film (Nejlepsí zahranicní film) Broken Flowers (2005) Won
2005 Audience Award Cambridge Film Festival Best Film Broken Flowers (2005) Won
2005 Grand Prize of the Jury Cannes Film Festival Broken Flowers (2005) Won
2005 Tribute Award Gotham Awards Won
2004 Audience Award Jeonju Film Festival Coffee and Cigarettes (2003) Won
2004 Filmmaker on the Edge Award Provincetown International Film Festival Won
1999 Douglas Sirk Award Hamburg Film Festival Won
1999 Audience Award Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999) Won
1998 Special Award Camerimage Best Independent Duo: Director – Cinematographer Won
1996 Screen International Award European Film Awards Dead Man (1995) Won
1996 Storyteller Award Taos Talking Picture Festival Won
1993 Palme d’Or – Best Short Film Cannes Film Festival Coffee and Cigarettes III (1993) Won
1993 Audience Award Warsaw International Film Festival Coffee and Cigarettes III (1993) Won
1989 Best Artistic Contribution Cannes Film Festival Mystery Train (1989) Won
1988 Robert Robert Festival Best Foreign Film (Årets udenlandske spillefilm) Down by Law (1986) Won
1988 Bodil Bodil Awards Best Non-European Film (Bedste ikke-europæiske film) Down by Law (1986) Won
1987 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Stranger Than Paradise (1984) Won
1987 Amanda Amanda Awards, Norway Best Foreign Feature Film (Årets utenlandske spillefilm) Down by Law (1986) Won
1985 Special Jury Recognition Sundance Film Festival Dramatic Stranger Than Paradise (1984) Won
1984 Golden Camera Cannes Film Festival Stranger Than Paradise (1984) Won
1984 Golden Leopard Locarno International Film Festival Stranger Than Paradise (1984) Won
1984 Prize of the Ecumenical Jury – Special Mention Locarno International Film Festival Stranger Than Paradise (1984) Won
1980 Josef von Sternberg Award Mannheim-Heidelberg International Filmfestival Permanent Vacation (1980) Won
2014 Halfway Award International Online Cinema Awards (INOCA) Best Original Screenplay Only Lovers Left Alive (2013) Nominated
2013 ICS Cannes Award International Cinephile Society Awards Best Director Only Lovers Left Alive (2013) Nominated
2013 Special Prize of the Jury Sitges – Catalonian International Film Festival Only Lovers Left Alive (2013) Nominated
2011 Officer of the Order of Arts and Letters Order of Arts and Letters, France On June 23, 2011. Nominated
2008 Golden Coach Cannes Film Festival Nominated
2006 Czech Lion Czech Lions Best Foreign Language Film (Nejlepsí zahranicní film) Broken Flowers (2005) Nominated
2005 Audience Award Cambridge Film Festival Best Film Broken Flowers (2005) Nominated
2005 Grand Prize of the Jury Cannes Film Festival Broken Flowers (2005) Nominated
2005 Tribute Award Gotham Awards Nominated
2004 Audience Award Jeonju Film Festival Coffee and Cigarettes (2003) Nominated
2004 Filmmaker on the Edge Award Provincetown International Film Festival Nominated
1999 Douglas Sirk Award Hamburg Film Festival Nominated
1999 Audience Award Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999) Nominated
1998 Special Award Camerimage Best Independent Duo: Director – Cinematographer Nominated
1996 Screen International Award European Film Awards Dead Man (1995) Nominated
1996 Storyteller Award Taos Talking Picture Festival Nominated
1993 Palme d’Or – Best Short Film Cannes Film Festival Coffee and Cigarettes III (1993) Nominated
1993 Audience Award Warsaw International Film Festival Coffee and Cigarettes III (1993) Nominated
1989 Best Artistic Contribution Cannes Film Festival Mystery Train (1989) Nominated
1988 Robert Robert Festival Best Foreign Film (Årets udenlandske spillefilm) Down by Law (1986) Nominated
1988 Bodil Bodil Awards Best Non-European Film (Bedste ikke-europæiske film) Down by Law (1986) Nominated
1987 Kinema Junpo Award Kinema Junpo Awards Best Foreign Language Film Stranger Than Paradise (1984) Nominated
1987 Amanda Amanda Awards, Norway Best Foreign Feature Film (Årets utenlandske spillefilm) Down by Law (1986) Nominated
1985 Special Jury Recognition Sundance Film Festival Dramatic Stranger Than Paradise (1984) Nominated
1984 Golden Camera Cannes Film Festival Stranger Than Paradise (1984) Nominated
1984 Golden Leopard Locarno International Film Festival Stranger Than Paradise (1984) Nominated
1984 Prize of the Ecumenical Jury – Special Mention Locarno International Film Festival Stranger Than Paradise (1984) Nominated
1980 Josef von Sternberg Award Mannheim-Heidelberg International Filmfestival Permanent Vacation (1980) Nominated