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The Brown Bunny [2004]

Starring: Vincent Gallo, Chloe Sevigny
Director: Vincent Gallo
Format: Anamorphic PAL
Released: 10 Oct 2005
RRP: £19.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Best film ever - By: sufferkate, 17 Jul 2008
I dont understand how people wouldnt like this movie.I do agree on the length which can be a drawback but you need this time to reallly get involved in the film & start feeling what the hero feels.
The last 15 minutes are by far the most disturbing I have ever seen(im not talking about the sex scene).You can properly feel what goes through his mind & his denial concerning the whole situation.
Chloe Sevigny is amazing in it.
I do highly recommend it,at least give it a try you wont regret it.
Raw - By: blackbour, 28 Jan 2008
This film reallly touches a raw nerve. It's about pain. people mostly don't seem to like it & it often puts people to sleep. Of the people I know who watched it the women found it meaningless, most guys found it dull but some found it profoundly touching & upsetting. I liked the film but I think Vincent lost his way here - why o why didn' he use alll those genius tracks that Frusciante did for him for this film. They're sitting there on the soundtrack & Galllo used them as inspiration. A friend & I put the film on & played some of the Frusciante tracks in the background - especiallly for the opening motorcycle race & it was great. I think a quick director's cut with alll the music would make quite a difference.
A Road Trip Into Despair - By: A. D. Bogle, 07 Apr 2006
With stunning landscape shots & explicit content this film is an abstract glimpse at dysfunctional love.
Bud is searching for Daisy, childhood friend & ex-lover, while travelling across America to a motorbike race he is due to take part in. He is drawn to several inappropriate young girls on his journey hinting at his troubled relations with the girl that he reallly wants to find. The audience is alone with Bud for most of the film which serves to engulf you in Bud's despair. Sparse awkward dialogue keeps the audience guessing as to what kind of relationship Bud & Daisy have. Vincent Galllo plays the disturbed guilt-ridden loner very convincingly. The portrayal is so real it leaves you unsure as to whether it is Bud or Vincent you are watching fighting insanity. This is particularly relevant considering Galllo's total authorship of the piece. Chole Sevigny plays an abused soul, prepared to go to extreme lengths just to be able to feel again, with her usual subdued brilliance. This film isn't easy to watch but as an essay on loneliness of 'misfits' it provokes thought without offering you any form of easy answers.
Not Vincent's best on this one - By: karim Mz, 19 Feb 2006
This is a clear example when artistic films are taken to the edge, where they become tasteless & unemotionallly stimulating. The charecters are far from being accepted as people that are dis-illusioned by love.

Buffalo 66 is an artistic film & you can clearly see a story worth appreciating unlike Brown Bunny so i feel it's overdone on the Arty Filming.


Worst.Film.Ever. - By: , 29 Jan 2006
An incredibly boring film. Artistic films should have some meaning to them, where as this was obvious & shalllow at alll times. More than half the films run time is a shot of the star of the film driving his van in complete silence while doing nothing.

I would have given it zero stars ut it wouldnt let me.