The Brown Bunny Page #3

Synopsis: After racing in New Hampshire, the lonely motorcycle racer Bud Clay drives his van in a five-day journey to California for the next race. Along his trip, he meets fan, lonely women, prostitutes, but he leaves them since he is actually looking for the woman he loves, Daisy. He goes to her house and leaves a note telling where he is lodged. Out of the blue, Daisy appears in his hotel room and soon he learns why he cannot find her.
Genre: Drama
Director(s): Vincent Gallo
Production: Wellspring Media
  1 win & 3 nominations.
 
IMDB:
5.0
Metacritic:
51
Rotten Tomatoes:
44%
NOT RATED
Year:
2003
93 min
Website
1,630 Views


I don't understand that.

It was just a party. I was just being friendly.

Why were you talking to those guys?

I saw them talk to you.

Why were you talking to them?

I thought they were nice guys, Bud.

- Nice guys?

- I talk to lots of guys at parties.

I didn't want anything from them.

I didn't care about them.

Why did you get high with them?

They just came into the bathroom

and they...

started smoking, and I thought it was pot.

Why did you smoke pot with them?

I was just going to have a little.

I just wanted to get high, Bud.

You were pregnant.

You shouldn't even have been drinking.

I know.

Why do you take drugs? I don't understand.

Because I'm an addict, Bud.

- Why can't you stop taking it?

- I don't want to take them anymore.

Why can't you stop taking drugs?

Why do you have to drink and take drugs?

I don't understand.

You made our baby die. Our baby died.

I'm so sorry. I didn't want it to die.

I didn't want any of it to happen, Bud,

but it did.

- Tell me what happened.

- They just barged in, Bud.

- There was no lock on the door and...

- Why didn't you tell them to leave?

They were standing in front of the door

and started smoking...

and I thought I'd just have a little bit

and then leave.

- And then what happened?

- Then I passed out, Bud.

Oh, my God!

They raped me.

You saw them and you left me there.

No, I saw them with you. I didn't see...

I was unconscious, Bud, and you saw me,

and you didn't help me.

You just left me there.

But I didn't know what to do.

I didn't know what to do.

- Why didn't you help me?

- I didn't know what to do.

You didn't know what to do?

No.

Why didn't you help me?

You left me lying there like that?

I don't know.

- I would've helped you, Bud.

- I know.

- I would've helped you.

- I know you would have.

I walked away. I saw you in there.

I saw you in the bedroom.

I saw them touching you.

I saw them put their hands on you

and touch you.

And you had your clothes on.

They pulled your bra down.

They had your pants down.

Then I left. I just kept walking.

And I was walking away to go home.

When I came back,

there was an ambulance there.

Why was there an ambulance there?

I was dead.

What do you mean?

I don't understand. Why was there...

I died, Bud.

I got sick. I choked.

And I died.

- I'm sorry.

- You didn't die.

Don't say you're sorry. You didn't die.

I know you didn't die.

You'll be okay, you're just sick.

- I'm not going to be okay, Bud.

- Yes, you are.

Nobody was there and I got sick,

and I threw up, and I choked, Bud.

The ambulance came...

and I was dead, Bud.

I died.

No.

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Vincent Gallo

Vincent Gallo (born April 11, 1961) is an American actor, director, model, musician and painter. Though he has had minor roles in mainstream films such as Arizona Dream, The Funeral and Palookaville, he is most associated with independent movies, including Buffalo '66, which he wrote, directed, scored and starred in and The Brown Bunny, which he also wrote, directed, produced, starred in and photographed. In the early 2000s, he released several solo recordings on Warp Records. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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