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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
Bukowski: Born Into This
(John Dullaghan)
Henry Charles Bukowski was one of the few people
whose art was realized and recognized while he
was still alive. The typical story is an individual
impacting generations after living a life of poverty
and despair, where the populous enjoys their work
long after they've left this earth. Through Bukowski's
tenacity at writing on a daily basis while holding
a job he loathed, along with his discovery by
John Martin, publisher of Black Sparrow Press,
he published 37 books and countless poems. Poems
and stories that described life and people in
a way no other had. He cut out the crap, and people
loved him for it.
This week, the week of his birthday on August
16, John Dullaghan, who is also a struggling artist
of a different medium, is releasing this documentary.
Thankfully, he left his solid advertising career
after it sent him to the emergency room with severe
chest pains, and found a different calling in
film. It was seven years in the making, having
interviewed over 150 people in Bukowski's life,
from the women who inspired his book "Women"
(one of his more controversial novels) to Sean
Penn and Bono's rendition of a night out with
the writer.
On a shoestring budget and a family to support,
Dullaghan paid his dues and come up with gold.
Fans of Bukowski's work know of his swaggering,
alcoholic and brash nature. What many don't know
is his soft underbelly. And you see both sides
in 113 minutes. Even when the man is simply explaining
something, not even reading his own poetry, he
still seems to be reciting life, speaking in a
rhythmic tone of a poet through and through. When
being interviewed by a European journalist who
asked him to describe love, he replied simply,
"Love is like a fog that disappears with
the first daylight of reality."
You see his heart, what he seems to call his
"bluebird" that stays safe and tucked
in. Having a beat ridden childhood, he seems almost
grateful for getting the penchant for bullshit
kicked right out of him. That enabled him to write
the way he did.
The inspiration for his novel "Hollywood"
came after writing the screenplay for the movie
Barfly, which was supposed to model the earlier
part of his life. Bukowski got to experience and
witness this other world that drowns in ignorance
and greed, typically suffocating any level of
real art. In contrast, he himself would have been
content with a menial living doing anything to
pay the bills as long as his typewriter was there
for him everyday. And it wasn't until John Martin
came along did he ever consider making an actual
living off his writing.
Dullaghan uses subtle ways to subtly represent
personality traits of Bukowski, even in the use
of subtitles with hand written edits that mimic
the writer's own editing style.
In the end, after all the sacrifices (which he
never saw as sacrifices, just life experiences
that were aggravating), and after all the pain
of his childhood, he was content. And the bluebird
was free.
Bukowski: Born Into This is playing exclusively
at Starz Filmcenter in Denver
www.magpictures.com/distribution/bukowski/
-Kim Owens, August 20, 2004
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