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Leaves of Grass
When Ivy League classics professor Bill Kincaid receives news of the murder of his estranged identical twin brother, he travels back to his home state of Oklahoma for a doomed scheme against a local drug lord.
25 June 1951, Canton, Ohio, USA
12 August 1948, Shreveport, Louisiana, USA
22 August 1967, Grants Pass, Oregon, USA
21 June 1964, New York City, New York, USA
4 October 1946, New York City, New York, USA
17 January 1955, Fort Monroe, Virginia, USA
4 August 1965, Montréal, Québec, Canada
5 July 1960, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
23 March 1976, Fountain Valley, California, USA
9 December 1954
25 September 1959, Plattsburgh, New York, USA
30 July 1965, San Antonio, Texas, USA
July 9, 1974 in Tupelo, Mississippi, USA
18 August 1969, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
11 May 1964, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA
October 10, 2010
This is a very personal film from Nelson that is jam packed with ideas and heavily influenced by the Coen Brothers...
September 24, 2010
It's a jarringly realistic hybrid that echoes the more surreal aspects of real, rural life, and Norton walks/ambles through it all, sporting dueling personalities and distinct accents, but one very serious heart.
August 30, 2011
Maybe too small-scale to be anything truly special, but an original and witty film that both surprises and entertains.
October 10, 2010
The DVD extras give the film a boost with a well done "making-of…" featurette and a commentary of the film by director Nelson, star Norton and producer William Migliore.
September 17, 2010
Mr. Norton is a pleasure to watch, and so is everyone else.
February 22, 2011
Essentially Deliverance cross-bred with A History of Violence...Leaves of Grass is a peculiar rural yarn and a sweet, assured examination of lost innocence and brotherhood that succeeds largely because of Norton's multi-faceted performance.
September 28, 2010
An offbeat thriller that is deepened -- rather than derailed -- by its tricky shift from darkly funny to just plain dark.
April 05, 2010
It's not the violence itself that bothers me, it's just that it completely destroys the tone of the movie.
January 05, 2014
really unbalanced
September 17, 2010
As a writer-director, Nelson keeps the laughs coming at a steady pace, and never condescends to his articulate redneck characters.
September 17, 2010
The mirror image gag is one of the oldest in the book, and yet, if done well, it never really gets old.

