The Charles Bukowski Tapes: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 07:42, 17 October 2010
The Charles Bukowski Tapes | |
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Directed by | Barbet Schroeder |
Written by | Barbet Schroeder |
Produced by | Barbet Schroeder |
Starring | Charles Bukowski |
Cinematography | Steven Hirsh, Elliot Enzig Porter, Paul Challacombe |
Edited by | Barbet Schroeder, Paul Challacombe |
Music by | Jean Louis Vallero |
Country | France |
Language | English |
The Charles Bukowski Tapes are a collection of short-interviews with the American writer/poet Charles Bukowski, filmed and assembled by Barbet Schroeder and first published in 1987 in the USA. Today, the video documentary is considered a cult classic.
Synopsis
The Charles Bukowski Tapes are an altogether more than four hours long collection of 52 short-interviews with the American cult author Charles Bukowski, sorted by topic and each between one and ten minutes long. Director Barbet Schroeder (Barfly) interviews Bukowski about such themes as alcohol, violence, and women, and Bukowski answers willingly, losing himself in sometimes minute-long monologues. Amongst other things, Bukowski leads the small camera team through his parents’s house and his former neighbourhood, but the largest part of the interviews takes place in Bukowski’s flat or backyard. The documentary includes a scene in which Bukowski reacts violently toward his wife Linda Lee.
History of origin
The documentary was assembled from about 64 hours of film footage, which accrued during the three-year lead time for Schroeder’s motion picture Barfly, for which Bukowski wrote the autobiographical script.
Critic
An outrageously stimulating and unnerving all-night drinking session with a gutter eloquent barroom philosopher. […] One of the most intimate, revealing and unsparing glimpses any film or video has ever given us of a writer’s life and personality.
— Michael Wilmington, The Los Angeles Times