Wanda: Don't you hate cops?
Chinaski: No, but I seem to feel better when they're not around....I just wanna thank you for your hospitality
Wanda: Just one thing - I don't wanna fall in love. I don't wanna go through that. I can't.
Chinaski: Hey, don't worry. Nobody has ever loved me, yet.
Henry Chinaski (Mickey Rourke) is an unemployed alcoholic who doesn't want to fit in and "be somebody". He drinks in the morning when he gets up and then he drinks a little more. And then he frequents the bar where he loves to piss off the bartender, Eddie. He gets into a fight with Eddie every night where all the people in the bar love watching him beaten to a pulp. And then he gets up and has one last drink before crashing at his place. That's one day in the life of Henry Chinaski.
Enter Wanda (Faye Dunaway). She's a drunk, but not someone who'd fall to the depths that Chinaski does. No one sits besides her in the bar because she's known to be "crazy". When Wanda knows Chinaski has no money, she invites him to her place. Although they bond well, Wanda warns Chinaski she would always leave him if another man offers her a drink. When a publisher by the name of Tully (Alice Krige), a woman from the wealthier side of the town, offers Chinaski a contract for his beautiful prose and beds with him, Chinaski has to choose between the two women.
"Some people never go crazy. What truly horrible lives they must lead" |
Barfly is a comedy/drama, directed by Barbet Schroeder, based on the short stories of Charles Bukowski. The central character is an autobiographical account of the author himself and it amazes to know that such a character could actually exist. Somebody had commented on IMDB.com something like, "I can't explain how much I liked this movie". To which a few people had replied how they exactly understood the character and how it feels to be a drunk like him. A friend had suggested the author, Charles Bukowski and was sure I'd like his writings. And this movie was among the top contenders in a list of movies on self-destruction. Combining these three factors, I had to watch the movie. And now that I have, I can't say "I get it". Although I'd agree to a lot of his rants on society, people, conventions, etc., the character's walk and his speech style (mimicking the ways of the author himself), much to my annoyance, reminded me of a batch-mate during my undergrad days! Only if I didn't have to see that walk, I could have said good things about the movie. No doubt the conversations between Chinaski and Wanda are very amusing, and his convictions about society (specially the classic dialogue -"Sometimes I just get tired of thinking of all the things that I don't wanna do. All the things that I don't wanna be. Places I don't wanna go, like India, like getting my teeth cleaned. Save the whale, all that, I don't understand that.") would make you question your own assumptions on who we are. Chinaski is the champion of all those who the rest would call as "losers".
The moments of brilliance in regards to the dialogues are thrown around in a random fashion - just like the trajectory of a drunkard. I'm not sure if it was intentional. I guess Mickey Rourke did such a great job of enacting the character of Chinaski that I went down a road I didn't want to visit. Or may be not. I really wouldn't know.
Rating: 6.5/10