The Brown Bunny (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:86
Fresh:38
Rotten:48
Average Rating:5/10
Consensus: More dull than hypnotic, The Brown Bunny is a pretentious and self-indulgent bore.
Theatrical Release:Aug 27, 2004 Limited
Synopsis: Vincent Gallo shocked the 2003 Cannes Film Festival with this highly personal film that he wrote, directed, produced, edited, photographed, and stars in. Gallo plays Bud Clay, a motorcycle racer on... Vincent Gallo shocked the 2003 Cannes Film Festival with this highly personal film that he wrote, directed, produced, edited, photographed, and stars in. Gallo plays Bud Clay, a motorcycle racer on his way from New Hampshire to California in a van. The cross-country trip includes stops at a gas station, where Clay meets and falls for a gas station attendant named Violet (Anna Vareschi); a roadside food stand, where he meets the sadly beautiful Lilly (Cheryl Tiegs, making her feature-film debut); and the Las Vegas strip, where he picks up local prostitute Rose (Elizabeth Blake). As he comes into contact with these women, he can't let go of his past, which centers around Daisy (Chloe Sevigny), whom he hopes to find when he returns home to Los Angeles. Nominated for the Palme d'Or at Cannes, THE BROWN BUNNY is a poignant, emotional drama that features long scenes with little or no dialogue, as Gallo uses natural sound and lighting, jazz and folk music, and long, lingering shots of the open road, raindrops on a windshield, and the scraggly-haired protagonist to create a nearly suffocating atmosphere of loss and loneliness. Winner of the FIPRESCI prize at the 2003 Viennale "for its bold exploration of yearning and grief and for its radical departure from dominant tendencies in current American filmmaking," THE BROWN BUNNY is sure to cause a stir because of its infamous and shocking X-rated sex scene near the end of the picture, although it is a tender, soft, and powerfully subtle film. [More]
Starring: Chloe Sevigny, Vincent Gallo, Cheryl Tiegs, Anna Vareschi
Starring: Chloe Sevigny, Vincent Gallo, Cheryl Tiegs, Anna Vareschi, Mary Morasky
Director: Vincent Gallo
Director: Vincent Gallo
Screenwriter: Vincent Gallo
Producer: Vincent Gallo
Studio: Wellspring
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Reviews for The Brown Bunny
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When every other scene looks like a cola, jeans or motorcycle commercial -- perfectly unposed with hair proudly mussed -- Gallo's motivations seem too compromised. Full Review |
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A humorless self-indulgent and self-loathing mess that is saddled with an uninteresting story and arty pretensions. Full Review |
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Personally, I think there's a haunting and fairly poignant story here; too bad it's surrounded by so many damn driving scenes. Full Review |
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Vincent Gallo is probably a much more interesting fellow than Bud Clay, the inarticulate motorcycle racer he portrays in The Brown Bunny. Full Review |
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Is it good? Not really. But as was the case with his Buffalo 66, Gallo once again shows himself to be a fascinating enigma and possibly his own worst enemy. Full Review |
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If this is a 'feature film,' then so are your old home movies, or videotapes from a convenience store's security camera. ... It's not just one scene; the whole movie blows. Full Review |
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a pretentious, silly bore of a would-be existential art film Full Review |
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For all its anti-action, The Brown Bunny gets its teeth in you and shakes. Full Review |
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A passable, if often dreary, evocation of those '70s road movies in which disillusioned young men (and the occasional woman) took to the highway in search of America, the meaning of things or maybe just a hamburger. Full Review |
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...M. Knight Shyamalan trapped in a pornorgraphic art flick. Full Review |
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Goes nowhere... slowly. Full Review |
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Yes, the film jumps up and down on a high wire over the chasm separating Pretension and Art. But that's also a form of courage. Full Review |
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A road movie, but made by someone who seems so self-absorbed he might as well be asleep at the wheel. Full Review |
Latest News for The Brown Bunny
November 04, 2005:
In Other News...Vincent Gallo: Weirder Than We Thought
First there was celebrity air, and then Britney's bra -- now, an even more intimate celebrity item is up for sale: fatherhood. More...
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