Charles Bukowski, the bard of post-war L.A.'s working-class underbelly, was no ordinary cult writer, and John Dullaghan's thorough, compelling doc Bukowski: Born Into This does a credible job of showing why.
Bukowski: Born Into This (2004)
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Reviews Counted:47
Fresh:39
Rotten:8
Average Rating:7.3/10
Consensus: A thoroughly engrossing documentary examining the life of talented but troubled writer Charles Bukowski.
Theatrical Release:Nov 30, 1999 Limited
Box Office: $81,682
Synopsis: Director John Dullaghan spent seven years searching high and low for the most pertinent material he could find about the notorious writer, drinker, and recluse Charles Bukowski (1920-1994). The... Director John Dullaghan spent seven years searching high and low for the most pertinent material he could find about the notorious writer, drinker, and recluse Charles Bukowski (1920-1994). The result is BUKOWSKI: BORN INTO THIS, a highly entertaining, informative tribute to Bukowski's work, his life, and the people who were inspired and influenced by him. Using a large quantity of grainy black-and-white interview footage shot by German Cosmopolitan in the 1970s, some of the most frank conversations and classic moments in the film--Bukowski driving his car through L.A. with a big crack in the windshield, telling stories--come from this archival material. Other interviews come from Bukowski's wife and a smattering of girlfriends ranging from "Cupcakes" to Linda King, from a former post office coworker, and from celebrities and friends like Taylor Hackford, Bono, Sean Penn, Harry Dean Stanton, and Tom Waits. Barbet Schroeder also appears in the film to talk about his feature film BARFLY, based on Bukowski, which starred Mickey Rourke. With readings of Bukowski's poems peppered throughout, the documentary traces the progress of his life from his miserable childhood to his 14-year tenure as a postal worker, his column "Notes of a Dirty Old Man" in the L.A. Free Press, his foul mouth and dark outlook, his misogynistic view of women, his books, and of course, his steady heavy drinking. And yet, the film is uplifting and shows Bukowski's soft, ironic side. BUKOWSKI: BORN INTO THIS succeeds with flying colors, adding new insight to this fascinating and hard-to-know character whose memory will not soon be forgotten. [More]
Starring: Bono, Sean Penn, Harry Dean Stanton, Barbet Schroeder
Starring: Bono, Sean Penn, Harry Dean Stanton, Barbet Schroeder, Taylor Hackford
Director: John Dullaghan
Director: John Dullaghan
Producer: John Dullaghan
Studio: Magnolia Pictures
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Reviews for Bukowski: Born Into This
Its power springs from the director’s shifting between fawning stories from long-time acquaintances and the scraggly, take-it-or-leave-it surliness of Bukowski himself.
[Bukowski's] grumbling, cursing, and hard-working persona remains an inspiration. Admirably, Born Into This does him justice.
'Poet laureate of the gutter,' ranter, sexual boaster, bane of the middle class and lifelong outcast, the writer cultivated a persona that begs for documentary treatment, and he gets a good one in Bukowski: Born Into This.
You come out of the theater wanting to beeline to a bookstore, grab a copy of Post Office or Love Is a Dog From Hell, and adjust your opinion as necessary.
A grueling two hours spent in the company of this one-man argument for the return of Prohibition.
It's to first-time filmmaker John Dullaghan's credit that he offers a portrait of the Southern California poet and novelist that digs beyond Bukowski's hard-drinking, hard-loving persona.
Accomplishes beautifully what it sets out to do, which is to reveal the man behind the crusty, hard-drinking, tough-talking persona Charles Bukowski so artfully crafted.
The more the film labors to canonize the man and his work, the further it gets away from their pungent essence.
Charles Bukowski - who wasn't always particularly pleasant, but who was always pleasantly particular - would have loved this gruff homage.
Dullaghan's thrilling documentary about the life and times of Charles Bukowski is the stuff that legends are made of.
A fan-boy hagiography of a mean-spirited alcoholic rather than a serious examination of a powerful writer and his writings.
Bukowski is one of my all time favorite writers and now I have an all new respect for the man thanks to John Dullaghan's phenomenal film.
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