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Bukowski: Born into This

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 25 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 12 votes
Read user comments
Rate this movie >
Movie Info
Genre(s): Documentary
Written by:
Directed by: John Dullaghan
Release Date:
Theatrical: May 28, 2004
DVD: March 21, 2006
Running Time: 130 minutes, Color
Origin: USA
Summary
RATING: Not Rated
Starring Charles Bukowski, Bono, Sean Penn, and Harry Dean Stanton
The first comprehensive documentary on author Charles Bukowski, one of those rare writers whose work created a myth of epic proportions around its creator. (Magnolia Pictures)
Also On The Web: Internet Movie Database Official Studio Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Film Threat Eric Campos
Bukowski is one of my all time favorite writers and now I have an all new respect for the man thanks to John Dullaghans phenomenal film. Ill be breaking out Post Office, Ham On Rye, and Notes of a Dirty Old Man again very soon.
Read Full Review >Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
It reveals Bukowski to be a far grander artist than his bum's armor would suggest.
Read Full Review >Portland Oregonian M. E. Russell
Often-brilliant, often-reverent documentary deconstructs Bukowski's bad-boy literary persona, finds a fascinatingly messed-up guy behind the words.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Michael O'Sullivan
A portrait of a sometimes surly, often foulmouthed, always brilliant artist that is at once humane, horrific, hilarious and deeply moving.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Stephen Hunter
About as good a picture of a writer's real life as we are likely to get. It is wide-ranging, it is fair, it is thorough, and although it admires, it is also tough enough to condemn.
Read Full Review >Village Voice Mark Holcomb
Charles Bukowski, the bard of post-war L.A.'s working-class underbelly, was no ordinary cult writer, and John Dullaghan's thorough, compelling doc Bukowski: Born Into This does a credible job of showing why.
Read Full Review >Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov
The bulk, the heft, and the girth of Bukowski: Born Into This arrives in the form of the author himself, giving beery readings to Berkeley audiences clearly enjoying a contact high or sitting, ill-kempt but quiet, pensive, Heineken in one yellowy paw, in his apartment.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
How much was legend, how much was pose, how much was real? I think it was all real, and the documentary suggests as much.
Read Full Review >Boston Globe Ty Burr
Wants to claim Bukowski (1920-1994) as a 20th-century West Coast Walt Whitman -- a people's poet of modern degradation. Through a selective presentation of his writing and a reverently crass treatment of his life, it makes a funny, often intensely moving case, and you're having such a good time that you're glad to let it.
Read Full Review >Variety Dennis Harvey
Makes a compelling case for raising him (Bukowski) from cult status to the top rank of 20th century U.S. literary figures -- while providing ample evidence of a very colorful life and times.
Read Full Review >Dallas Observer Robert Wilonsky
A remarkable movie, because, like "Crumb" or even "American Splendor," it adores the very people most of us might ignore if they passed us on the street. It's a love letter to someone who desperately needs one, even 10 years after his death.
Read Full Review >Chicago Reader J.R. Jones
This documentary profile of poet and novelist Charles Bukowski exploits the writer's counterculture persona but also works to dispel it, revealing a gifted and extremely complicated man.
Read Full Review >Christian Science Monitor David Sterritt
Excerpts from Schroeder's long video documentary about him, and from the flawed melodrama "Barfly" they made together, add more variety.
Read Full Review >Baltimore Sun Stephen Kiehl
Some of the most affecting moments in the film show Bukowski walking the streets of his Los Angeles, a barren suburban hell, as he reads his poems and the words appear on and then fade from the screen.
Read Full Review >New York Post Megan Lehmann
The dirty old man who became a cult poet and author was a true original, and every minute he's on screen, whether it's reading from his brutally honest work or musing on a hard-lived life for the cameras, it's hard to look away.
Read Full Review >New York Daily News Jack Mathews
He's not someone you may wish you'd known, but he's a fascinating street character.
Read Full Review >Chicago Tribune Allison Benedikt
Raw and defining documentary about the man--and the myth.
Read Full Review >San Francisco Chronicle Walter Addiego
It's the portrait of an artist who had neither time nor respect for literary niceties -- he was, in the words of publisher John Martin, a "man of the street writing for the man of the street."
Read Full Review >Los Angeles Times Kevin Thomas
Accomplishes beautifully what it sets out to do, which is to reveal the man behind the crusty, hard-drinking, tough-talking persona Charles Bukowski so artfully crafted.
Read Full Review >Premiere Aaron Hillis
Dullaghan's film is a bit too straightforward and introductory to be declared a definitive portraiture. The gold nuggets worth sifting for lie in the anecdotal minutiae.
Read Full Review >TV Guide Maitland McDonagh
By turns profane, vulgar, unpredictable, scabrous and perpetually somewhere between buzzed and three sheets to the wind, Bukowski opened a window onto a fringe world of blue-collar drudgery and alcoholic self-obliteration with his blistering, bleakly comic dispatches from the gutter.
Read Full Review >The Onion (A.V. Club) Nathan Rabin
Goes to great lengths to show the man-child behind the barfly, but in its rush to deify its subject, it lacks critical voices and context.
Read Full Review >LA Weekly Scott Foundas
As factoids do-si-do with testimonials from the likes of drinking buddy Sean Penn and fan-boy Bono, the movie all but becomes the very A&E Hagiography for which Bukowski would have had little or no patience.
Read Full Review >The Hollywood Reporter Richard James Havis
Despite the fact there's no lack of raw material, Bukowski fails to place its subject's actions and statements in any psychological or literary context. It's simply a celebration of Bukowski's misogyny and self-abuse.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this movie is 8.7 (out of 10) based on 12 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Johana gave it a9:
Great documentary. shows how Bukowski was a raw and unfiltered writer.
Jason J gave it a10:
Anyone who did not like this documentary should be banished from society. Surrender - where ever you are - you have failed the test as a human being. Pirates of the Caribbean and Spider Man were tests sent by God. If you enjoyed them, you failed. Watch (and read) Bukowksi, appreciate it, and perhaps you will get a reprieve from Him. Suckers.
[Anonymous] gave it an8:
This is a must-see for anyone who is a fan of Bukowski. A lot of this footage is unique, never seen before home movies, interspersed with an ongoing interview with German television.
Gerry gave it a9:
Where have I been the last 40 years! The Beats are great but this guy is incredible and this documentary seems to have profilied him particularly well.
Mick . gave it a9:
One of the best things made on the life of.
Keith P. gave it a10:
Turns myth into man - a remarkable man who persisted in his art despite a mind-numbing job and way too much alcohol. Very well done doc.
ChloƩ T. gave it a10:
If you didn't know Charles Bukowski was a GOOD man, now it's done.
