The Brown Bunny Movie Review
The Brown Bunny Review

"The Brown Bunny" Overview

Rating: NR
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Vincent GalloProducer : Vincent Gallo
Screenwiter : Vincent Gallo
Starring : Vincent Gallo,Chloe Sevigny,Cheryl Tiegs,Elizabeth Blake,Anna Vareschi
By all indications, actor/director/musician/man-about-town Vincent Gallo’s
second full-length feature The Brown Bunny should have collapsed under the
weight of its own negative hype. First, there were the reports of unsimulated
fellatio between Gallo and fellow scenster Chloë Sevigny. There was the film’s
noxious reception at Cannes. Then, film critic and Beyond the Valley of the
Dolls scribe Roger Ebert named the film the worst movie ever shown at the
French fashion show/film festival. Despite this pronouncement, The Brown Bunny
went on to win a special critic’s prize at the Viennale Film Festival. And a
week before the film’s U.S. opening — as Gallo drove a print of the film around
the country to host advance screenings — a billboard company tore down a
previously approved advertisement depicting Gallo and Sevigny en flagrante.
How can a director protect 92 minutes of celluloid from such a deluge of
distraction? With heart, elegance and respect for his audience; and Gallo does
just that.
The Brown Bunny is the story of Bud Clay (Gallo), a professional motorcycle
racer facing a long, depressing trip across country after a third-place finish
on a New Hampshire racetrack. As Bud points his car west towards his home
speedway in Los Angeles, the camera watches him reminisce about his girlfriend
Daisy (Chloë Sevigny) and suffer through an array of emotional outbursts. As he
moves closer to his destination it becomes increasingly obvious that all is not
well in California.
Bud spends most of his travels pursuing standard road trip fare – stopping for
the bathroom, having a bite to eat, catching a night’s sleep at a hotel,
filling up his gas tank. Gallo captures these quotidian events in a mind
numbing, matter-of-fact detail that moviegoers will find at odds with the
typical summer movie offering.
But along the way Bud has incongruous eruptions of empathy and anguish. Bud’s
conflicted emotional state leaves him with a sixth sense for suffering. He
pathetically pleads for a young gas station employee (Anna Vareschi) to join
him on his trip, only to abandon her as she packs her belongings. He catches
the eye of a forlorn, middle-aged woman (Cheryl Tiegs) sitting alone at a gas
station and engages in a heartbreaking make-out session, then silently
withdraws and returns to his journey. He presses a pet store clerk to explain
why the brown bunnies for sale can’t live longer than five or six years, then
storms out of the store.
Gallo plays these scenes with care, articulating a complex emotional state —
saturated with guilt, sadness, anger, confusion — while subtly driving the
story forward by revealing a growing dread as Bud approaches LA. With minimal
exposition, Gallo as both director and actor succeeds at building suspense
around what is waiting for him at his destination and how it is connected with
his roadside interactions. When all is revealed in the film’s climactic scene
(pun intended), Bud’s story concludes with a crushing, if somewhat contrived,
revelation.
Gallo’s filmmaking heightens Bud’s sense of aimlessness and longing though
extensive use of long shots. Prolonged stretches of road pass before the
camera, broken up only by the occasional, and equally lengthy, picture of Bud
driving. Sunlight reflecting off of parked cars washes out many of the daytime
scenes. Shots from the driver’s perspective are focused to show the bugs and
dirt collected on the windshield. Rain falling against a car window creates
strange, hypnotic visual undulations and heightens the feeling of confinement
and claustrophobia in the car. In other words, Gallo does an amazing job of
depicting the lonesome boredom of a long distance road trip.
And this melancholy persists even after the far-from-erotic sexual encounter.
Ultimately, we’re left with a film not centered on a single shocking scene, but
a singular vision of a man’s inability to accept responsibility for his own
misfortune. And given the sustained noise generated by The Brown Bunny, such a
quiet achievement amounts to a resounding success.
More like a pink bunny, but whatever.
Reviewer: Aaron Lazenby





