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Breakfast of Champions
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Directed by Alan Rudolph.
In a small American town called Midland City, Dwayne Hoover (Bruce Willis) -- a loyal father, a successful car dealer, and a respected member of the community --lives with his wife Celia (Barbara Hershey), who's addicted to pills and TV shows, and his son Bunny (Lukas Haas), who is a weakling. What's more, his best friend and employee Harry Le Sabre (Nick Nolte) is a paranoid red-lace-lingerie fetishist. Dwayne finds short-term consolation in the arms of his secretary and mistress, Francine (Glenne Headley). As the American Dream slowly becomes his nightmare, Hoover begins to retreat into a fantasy world, filled with strange voices and fearful visions. It takes only the arrival of third-rate science-fiction writer Kilgore Trout (Albert Finney) -- whose novels are turned into fourth-rate porno comics -- at the Midland City Art Festival for things to explode. Hoover's only hope is Kilgore, whom he has raised to the status of a guru in his fantasies. However, the two men meet when time, space, and reality have already lost their meaning. Now it is only nonsense that makes sense and madness that reigns; the American dream has turned into lunacy. Breakfast of Champions, which had its world premiere during the 49th International Berlin Film Festival in 1999, is the outcome of a project in the making for over twenty years. Director Alan Rudolph wrote the script when the novel by Kurt Vonnegut was first published. However, it took all this time (and perhaps the casting of someone like Bruce Willis in order to get it financed) for the project to be realized. ~ Gönül Dönmez-Colin, All Movie Guide
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TheWorkingDeadTheWorkingDead They Got it Wrong
by TheWorkingDead in The Film Library
disliked it.
"The flipside to my argument for modifying source material is that sometimes, well, that just doesn't work. Everyone interprets what they read differently, and based on their own biases and experiences will obviously get varying meanings from the same book. This backfires, sometimes, and makes it very easy to completely miss the mark. I think, honestly, the list of 'bad' adaptations would be quite a bit longer than the list of 'good' adaptations. One of the worst I can think of would have to be Breakfast of Champions, based on the book by Kurt Vonnegut Jr., who I rank as one of the best american novelists of our time, if not my own personal favorite. Robert Altman apparently wanted to film this book in the 70s, and I can only dream of what that movie would have been like. Altman's jumbled, cynical but humane sensibilities could have meshed perfectly with Vonnegut's bleakly humorous, but in the end compassionate writing style. Instead we had to wait until ... " [More]
 



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Puhnner
Puhnner
loved it.
CaptainJackford
CaptainJackford
loved it.
QFLW
QFLW
liked it.
plastichandgun
plastichandgun
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dragonreborn
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mercurial
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