Pinero's life may move by quickly here, but Bratt does a masterful job of finding the flow in this shooting star who burned bright and burned out too soon.
Piņero (2001)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:61
Fresh:26
Rotten:35
Average Rating:5.4/10
Consensus: Though Bratt is great in the title role, the biopic itself is messy and Piņero grows tiresome.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for drug use, strong language and sexuality
Runtime: 1 hr 43 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Dec 14, 2001 Limited
Box Office: $198,291
Synopsis: Miguel Piņero was a New York City poet and playwright who wrote what he knew: a world of "stabbing, shooting and dying." This gritty, non-linear biographical film presents Piņero's dark charisma... Miguel Piņero was a New York City poet and playwright who wrote what he knew: a world of "stabbing, shooting and dying." This gritty, non-linear biographical film presents Piņero's dark charisma and even darker life in all it's angry glory. A junkie, a drug dealer, and a thief, Piņero (played by Benjamin Bratt) spent time in SIng-SIng prison, an experience which was the basis of his most famous play, SHORT EYES, which won the Tony award in 1974. Piņero also pioneered the spoken-word poetry (the forebearer to rap and hip-hop) of the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, which he helped found. Mixing digital video in color with 16mm film in black and white, the film creates a convincingly harsh and lively portrait of life on the mean streets of Lower East Side Manhattan in the 1970s and '80s. There were a number of people in Piņero's life who recognized his genius and tried to save him from self-destruction: his mother (Rita Moreno), theater impresario Joseph Papp (Mandy Patinkin), and his longtime girlfriend (Talisa Soto). But the allure of crime and drugs won him over, and Piņero finally crashed and burned, dying young in 1988. This film is a passionate tribute to a passionate artist who remains an important Puerto Rican-American icon. [More]
Starring: Benjamin Bratt, Talisa Soto, Mandy Patinkin, Rita Moreno
Starring: Benjamin Bratt, Talisa Soto, Mandy Patinkin, Rita Moreno, Jaime Sanchez, Giancarlo Esposito
Director: Leon Ichaso
Director: Leon Ichaso
Screenwriter: Leon Ichaso
Producer: Fisher Stevens
Studio: Miramax Films
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Release:
Jul 16, 2002
Reviews for Piņero
Benjamin Bratt, the pretty boy once seen on the arm of America's sweetheart Julia Roberts, plays Piņero with a passion. It's a star-making performance.
A dizzying, constantly moving ride through an exciting decade in the blossoming of 'Nuyorican' culture with its most flamboyant figure as our focus.
A daring, free-spirited and ultimately moving performance by Benjamin Bratt lies at the beating heart of Pinero.
For all the film's spectacle, its visual flash and approximation of street 'realism,' its most daring aspect is its willingness to represent Piņero as a vicious, frightened thug.
What makes this one different, and therefore MUCH better, is that it avoids the typical 'this happened and then this happened' structure that makes most biographical films such heavy lifting.
The film's rhythm is so deftly crude it unwinds like an underground 80s cinematic relic.
Overall, Ichaso's mosaic of a celebrated misfit has the potential moodiness to resonate as something engagingly reflective.
Director Leon Ichaso circles around the life and the work of Piņero with an intensity that matches the Puerto Rican-born artist's creativity.
It's impressionistic and risks incoherence, but it works as a successful montage of the unruly life of a sensitive, talented, but conflicted man whose self-destructiveness it never tries to sugarcoat or deny.
There's no denying that [Bratt's] riveting, live-wire performance as the title character here energizes an otherwise sketchy biography.
Seems like it's scrawled in blank verse on the back of a greasy paper bag -- and that's a compliment.
Offers a highly impressionistic portrait of this self-described 'junkie Christ,' played with riveting intensity by Benjamin Bratt.
Benjamin Bratt gets to show off a lot in the title role, but to his credit he nails Piņero's Beat poetry and transmits startling savagery through his flashing eyes.
A vivid rendering of the complexities of the artist's soul, and a notable attempt to convey the trajectory of a volatile creative life.
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