The Brown Bunny is short on plot, but it carefully dabs emotion all over the place; it's an expressionist's drama. Our fly-on-the-wall journey with Bud, as he crosses the U.S. from New England to a race in California, reveals sharp realities at every turn. On the road, he meets three women with noticibly floral names—Lily (Cheryl Tiegs), Rose (Elizabeth Blake) and Violet (Anna Varechi). Each possesses something that catches his eye, but their attachments are nevertheless fleeting. The intimate mystery of his greatest love and heartbreak reveals itself slowly, climaxing in one of the most controversial scenes in motion picture history, and resulting in one of this decade’s most unfairly-judged works.
Monday, December 8, 2008
Film #95: The Brown Bunny
The Brown Bunny is short on plot, but it carefully dabs emotion all over the place; it's an expressionist's drama. Our fly-on-the-wall journey with Bud, as he crosses the U.S. from New England to a race in California, reveals sharp realities at every turn. On the road, he meets three women with noticibly floral names—Lily (Cheryl Tiegs), Rose (Elizabeth Blake) and Violet (Anna Varechi). Each possesses something that catches his eye, but their attachments are nevertheless fleeting. The intimate mystery of his greatest love and heartbreak reveals itself slowly, climaxing in one of the most controversial scenes in motion picture history, and resulting in one of this decade’s most unfairly-judged works.
Labels:
Buffalo '66,
Chloe Sevigny,
Drama,
romance,
The Brown Bunny,
Vincent Gallo
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1 comment:
I love your blog keep it up so I can keep reading.
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