Buffalo '66

Billy Brown just got out of jail. Now he’s going to serve some real time. He’s going home.

7.1
19981h 50m

Production

Logo for Muse Productions

Billy is released after five years in prison. In the next moment, he kidnaps teenage student Layla and visits his parents with her, pretending she is his girlfriend and they will soon marry.

Available For Free On

Logo for Kanopy
Logo for Hoopla
Logo for Fawesome

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Trailer

Trailer

Thumbnail for video: 'Pointed Knife' Scene

'Pointed Knife' Scene

Thumbnail for video: 'A Heart Cookie' Scene

'A Heart Cookie' Scene

Thumbnail for video: 'Hot Chocolate' Scene

'Hot Chocolate' Scene

Thumbnail for video: 'Photo Booth' Scene

'Photo Booth' Scene

Thumbnail for video: 'Layla Tap Dances' Scene

'Layla Tap Dances' Scene

Thumbnail for video: 'Bowling Ball' Scene

'Bowling Ball' Scene

Thumbnail for video: 'How We Met' Scene

'How We Met' Scene

Thumbnail for video: 'Hands On The Dash' Scene

'Hands On The Dash' Scene

Thumbnail for video: 'Kidnapping Billy's Fake Wife' Scene

'Kidnapping Billy's Fake Wife' Scene

Cast

Photo of Vincent Gallo

Vincent Gallo

Billy Brown

Photo of Ben Gazzara

Ben Gazzara

Jimmy Brown

Photo of Rosanna Arquette

Rosanna Arquette

Wendy Balsam

Photo of Kevin Corrigan

Kevin Corrigan

Rocky the Goon

Photo of Mickey Rourke

Mickey Rourke

The Bookie

Photo of Kevin Pollak

Kevin Pollak

TV Sportscaster

Photo of Alex Karras

Alex Karras

TV Sportscaster

Photo of Jamie King

Jamie King

Tap Dance Kid

More Like This

Reviews

W

Wuchak

6/10

Mostly tedious, but Ricci is adorable, “Heart of the Sunrise” is featured and the message is potent

An angry sad sack (Vincent Gallo) is released after five years in prison near Buffalo and proceeds to kidnap a cute girl at a ballet studio (Christina Ricci). She surprisingly agrees to go along with the charade of being his wife to fool his nutty parents. His sole ambition seems to be to kill a field goal kicker for the Bills who let him down five years earlier. Anjelica Huston, Mickey Rourke, Jan-Michael Vincent and Rosanna Arquette have brief roles.

“Buffalo ’66” (1998) is an offbeat indie written & directed by its star, Gallo. I only know him from Coppola’s “Tetro” (2009) where he proved to have an almost Brando-like charisma (I said “almost”). Ricci is one of the highlights here as she’s petite, voluptuous and adorable. Unfortunately, most of the episodes in the story could’ve been cut by one-third or even one-half. As it is, they become tedious, such as the loong segment at the parent’s house. But the final act wins the day with Yes’ “Heart of the Sunrise” placed strategically and a profound moral about the power of uncompromising love to change a piece of sheet.

The film runs 1 hour, 50 minutes and was shot in Buffalo, New York, and surround areas (Gowanda, Lackawanna and Woodlawn).

GRADE: C+/B-

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

"Billy" (Vincent Gallo) gets let out of prison and promises to bring his new wife to meet his mother. An hasty promise for two reasons. First - well, he hasn't actually got a wife and second - he is desperate to pee. Intent on sorting out the latter problem, he encounters "Layla" (Christina Ricci) whom he promptly thinks can solve his other problem, so he frog marches her to her car and hopes that she - by now at gunpoint - will agree to help him out. Risky strategy, that! Can it work out for him? Well what now follows is an entertainingly quirky road movie that sees the two gradually bond whilst we learn about both of their rather complicated pasts. It's not just his mother (Angelica Huston) that he wants to visit; he also has a score to settle with a bookie (Mickey Rourke) but maybe, just maybe, his new companion might adjust his priorities? This is a well paced, intimate movie and there is a good, almost magnetic, dynamic between Gallo and Ricci. The story is lively and engaging offering us an offbeat love story that is, though maybe a touch predictable, based more on two characterful performances rather than cheesy sentiment (of which there is none!) and gooey love scenes as they head for their own kind of redemption. Coffee and doughnuts anyone?

You've reached the end.