Sunday 27 February 2011

Barfly

Filmed in 1987 by Barbet Schroeder and produced by American Zoetrope, this telling of the classic Charles Bukowski story stars Mickey Rourke as the lead, Henry Chinaski and co-stars Faye Dunaway.

Plot: Henry is a drunk, a barfly, he hangs around the local pub and fights the barman on a regular basis, usually losing. He also writes and flirts in a an oddly successful and lacklustre way. He meets a woman (Dunaway) and moves in with her straight away, two drunks understanding in each other the same things.

There really isn't a great deal more to this story, but it is as a story and in the telling, that we delve into this life they lead. Henry is the a functioning alcoholic who writes short stories and has them discovered...not that it really changes anything but the amount of drinks he can buy.

It's an odd cast. Rourke plays a character, but having read some of bukowski's more widely spread novels and having see the recent film of his book Factotum, I'm not convinced that he plays Chinaski and not just a random, aggressive drunk. This film doesn't capture Bukowski's writing as faithfully as it could, shame.

If you are a fan and given the prose, you should be...watch Matt Dillon's 2005 version of Factotum.  

Fun Fact: Faye Dunaway insisted on a lingering shot of her legs in one scene. Whether it was to prove her sexuality or whether she simply thought it added to the character I don't know, she did have great legs for a then, 45 year old though.

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