Factotum

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Critics' Reviews

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Metascore
®
71
Generally favorable reviews
out of 100
'Factotum' is Dreary, Off-Putting
By David Germain, Associated Press

Charles Bukowski deserves better than director Bent Hamer's dismal, wearisome adaptation of his novel "Factotum," and so do Bukowski's fans.

The movie is ugly, depressing and persistently off-putting, even repulsive at times in its portrait of an artist as an embodiment of human detritus. Granted, it may be a fair reflection of Bukowski's own lifestyle, but this is a case where a thousand words of Bukowski's playful prose is worth far more than the nasty pictures Hamer employs to capture the writer's spirit.

It's one thing to read about a degenerate life in poetic language; it's another to watch such a life play out in explicit imagery.

The book was a thinly veiled chronicle of the young Bukowski's meandering, odd-jobbing, boozing and womanizing while trying to become a writer during World War II.

Crudely updated to modern times, the movie stars Matt Dillon as Bukowski's alter-ego, Henry Chinaski, who would rather hold a drink than a job and dashes off his scribbled short stories to magazine editors in between binging and sleeping around.

That's pretty much the whole movie. Chinaski finds work, gets bored or angry or thirsty, and wanders off. Sometimes to a bar. Sometimes to the racetrack. Sometimes he gets fired the first day on the job. Sometimes he lasts a month or two.

He wanders from woman to woman, mainly the clingy Jan (Lili Taylor, who looks so grubby and trashy in some scenes she's downright vulgar). Chinaski also hooks up with a mildly higher-class breed of tramp, Laura (Marisa Tomei).

Hamer, co-writing the screenplay with Jim Stark, weaves in voice-overs of Dillon reading bits and pieces of Bukowski's lyrical street-wise insights from various books — those sequences providing the movie's few highlights.

The rough-edged humor and whimsy of Bukowski's writing is largely lacking, a surprise given the fanciful tone of Hamer's 2004 comic gem "Kitchen Stories."

The performances fit the dreary tone, Dillon suitably bellicose or offensive or, at Chinaski's best, merely disagreeable. Tomei flits in and out of "Factotum" so quickly she has little chance to put much of a face on Laura, but Taylor really hurls herself into Jan, and while it's some fine acting, it's unpleasant in the way watching a drunken bimbo pleading for another drink would be unpleasant in real life.

The bleak and ragged design, cinematography, clothing and makeup all carefully suit the mood, the filmmakers apparently aiming to show the unsightly and unromantic side of the artistic life.

Essentially, it's 90 minutes of humans wallowing in filth; for instance, Chinaski and Jan taking turns jumping out of bed and running to the bathroom to retch and puke after a bender.

Do some people live this way? Sure. Do the rest of us want to watch them? Probably not. 

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Charles Bukowski deserves better than director Bent Hamer's dismal, wearisome adaptation of his novel "Factotum," and so do Bukowski's fans.

The movie is ugly, depressing and persistently off-putting, even repulsive at times in its portrait of an artist as an embodiment of human detritus. Granted, it may be a fair reflection of Bukowski's own lifestyle, but this is a case where a thousand words of Bukowski's playful prose is worth far more than the nasty pictures Hamer employs to capture the writer's spirit.

It's one thing to read about a degenerate life in poetic language; it's another to watch such a life play out in explicit imagery.

The book was a thinly veiled chronicle of the young Bukowski's meandering, odd-jobbing, boozing and womanizing while trying to become a writer during World War II.

Crudely updated to modern times, the movie stars Matt Dillon as Bukowski's alter-ego, Henry Chinaski, who would rather hold a drink than a job and dashes off his scribbled short stories to magazine editors in between binging and sleeping around.

That's pretty much the whole movie. Chinaski finds work, gets bored or angry or thirsty, and wanders off. Sometimes to a bar. Sometimes to the racetrack. Sometimes he gets fired the first day on the job. Sometimes he lasts a month or two.

He wanders from woman to woman, mainly the clingy Jan (Lili Taylor, who looks so grubby and trashy in some scenes she's downright vulgar). Chinaski also hooks up with a mildly higher-class breed of tramp, Laura (Marisa Tomei).

Hamer, co-writing the screenplay with Jim Stark, weaves in voice-overs of Dillon reading bits and pieces of Bukowski's lyrical street-wise insights from various books — those sequences providing the movie's few highlights.

The rough-edged humor and whimsy of Bukowski's writing is largely lacking, a surprise given the fanciful tone of Hamer's 2004 comic gem "Kitchen Stories."

The performances fit the dreary tone, Dillon suitably bellicose or offensive or, at Chinaski's best, merely disagreeable. Tomei flits in and out of "Factotum" so quickly she has little chance to put much of a face on Laura, but Taylor really hurls herself into Jan, and while it's some fine acting, it's unpleasant in the way watching a drunken bimbo pleading for another drink would be unpleasant in real life.

The bleak and ragged design, cinematography, clothing and makeup all carefully suit the mood, the filmmakers apparently aiming to show the unsightly and unromantic side of the artistic life.

Essentially, it's 90 minutes of humans wallowing in filth; for instance, Chinaski and Jan taking turns jumping out of bed and running to the bathroom to retch and puke after a bender.

Do some people live this way? Sure. Do the rest of us want to watch them? Probably not. 

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

80
Washington Post: Ann Hornaday
The film looks great on the screen, and Hamer has commissioned a terrific musical score from Kristin Asbjornsen, who has set a few of Bukowski's poems to haunting, jazzy music.Read Full Review »
80
The New York Times: Manohla Dargis
Like the film itself, Mr. Dillon’s performance works through understatement.Read Full Review »
80
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kenneth Turan
The result is a surprisingly satisfying film, true to Bukowski and itself, a work that manages to make the man and his profane world more palatable without compromising on who he was and what he stood for.Read Full Review »
63
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
After a while, Factotum surrenders to monotony and only the performances are likely to retain the viewer's interest.Read Full Review »
63
Boston Globe: Ty Burr
Looks steam-cleaned, and that can't be right.Read Full Review »
50
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
It's too bad that the film was directed by the Norwegian minimalist Bent Hamer (Kitchen Stories), who makes a fetish of building scenes around silence.Read Full Review »
50
Village Voice: Melissa Levine
None of it goes anywhere. It's just stylized alcoholism with a tired wink.Read Full Review »
See all Factotum reviews at metacritic.com »