Buffalo 66

Rank

Top 20% of all time (see others with this rank)

Festival Year

1998 (click here to see all competition films from this year)

Category

Dramatic Competition

Cast

Vincent Gallo, Christina Ricci, Ben Gazzara, Anjelica Huston

Non-Cast Credits

Vincent Gallo, Chris Hanley, Michael Paseornek, Jeff Sackman, John Dunning, Andre Link, alison Bagnall, Lance Acord, Curtiss Clayton, Gideon Ponte

Description

Following his arresting performances in such films as The Funeral and Palookaville (Sundance 1996), Vincent Gallo trumpets his arrival as a premier filmmaker with the dazzling Buffalo 66. Remarkably assured in his multiple roles of director, lead actor, composer, and screenwriter, Gallo delivers on his lofty ambitions in this captivating (and at times comedic) drama of contemporary alienation.

On an icy morning on the industrial outskirts of Buffalo, New York, Billy Brown is released from the state penitentiary after a five-year Stint. Before returning home, Billy concocts a more illustrious account of his absence: a high-powered career as a secret agent and marriage to a beautiful woman named Wendy. Looking to bolster his narrative, he impulsively grabs a young tap dancer, Layla, and forces her to play Wendy. Though only barely congenial to Billy, his parents Jan and Vincent are beguiled by "Wendy," who is only too happy to ingratiate herself into this absurdly dysfunctional family, Angry and dejected, Billy turns his attention to hunting down the Buffalo Bills kicker whose botched field goal he believes ruined his life, However, as he "spans time" with Layla, Billy is torn between acting out his violent vendetta or overcoming his allergy to intimacy.

Saturated with Lance Acord's sumptuous visuals, Buffalo 66 is a hallucinatory triumph of shot composition and editing. With his formidable visual lexicon, Gallo suggests he has drunk from the cup of breakthrough seventies cinema. However, the film is all Gallo's and without doubt one of the most breathtakingly innovative adventures in recent cinema.

Reviewer

Rebecca Yeldham (see other films reviewed by the same reviewer)

Film Takes Pace.