Mashable 11月07日 19:34
《Bunny》:一部充满纽约生活气息的独立喜剧
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《Bunny》是本·雅各布森的导演处女作,以东村一栋公寓楼的居民为主角,讲述了一个混乱、充满社区感且角色鲜明的故事,充分展现了纽约市的独特风貌。影片巧妙融合了纽约的经典魅力和更为接地气的一面,是一封献给纽约的真诚情书。故事围绕主人公Bunny展开,他是一个在东村生活的“忙碌人”,生活和住所都充满了戏剧性。影片以黑色幽默和意想不到的情节,展现了Bunny在一个糟糕的生日里,如何与他所爱的人们共同应对一系列混乱事件,包括处理尸体和掩盖谋杀案。影片成功塑造了一群性格各异但彼此关爱的邻居,他们共同帮助Bunny度过难关。影片的选角真实而充满化学反应,让观众仿佛置身于真实的纽约社区,感受其中的活力、八卦和深厚情谊。

🎬 **纽约精神的生动展现**:《Bunny》以东村一栋公寓楼为背景,生动刻画了一群性格鲜明、充满活力的纽约市民。影片通过主人公Bunny糟糕的生日所引发的一系列混乱事件,展现了纽约市独特的生活气息、社区活力以及居民之间复杂而深厚的情感联系,被誉为一部充满纽约风情的独立电影。

😂 **黑色幽默与意外情节**:影片巧妙运用黑色幽默和意想不到的情节来推动故事发展。主人公Bunny在生日当天卷入了一系列麻烦,包括处理尸体和掩盖谋杀案,而他身边的邻居们则以一种奇特而团结的方式共同应对这些危机。这种荒诞而又充满人情味的处理方式,使得影片既引人入胜又充满趣味。

💖 **社区凝聚力与家庭情感**:尽管生活充满挑战和意外,但《Bunny》的核心在于展现了社区居民之间的凝聚力和深厚的情感纽带。这群看似格格不入的人们,因为共同的居住空间和生活经历,形成了一个非传统的“家庭”。当Bunny陷入困境时,他们会毫不犹豫地伸出援手,共同面对困难,凸显了在喧嚣的城市中,人与人之间真挚的情感连接是多么重要。

🌟 **真实选角与沉浸式体验**:影片的选角避开了大牌明星,而是选择了充满个性和爆发力的演员,这为影片增添了极高的真实感。观众在观看时,不仅能看到自己熟悉或可能遇到的纽约人,更能感受到影片所营造的沉浸式氛围,仿佛置身于那个充满活力、八卦和激情的社区之中,体验到人与人之间复杂而又温暖的互动。

After Hours. Do the Right Thing. In the Heights. When Harry Met Sally. They're movies with very different plots and vibes, and yet all are definitively New York. Now the canon of exceptionally New York movies has grown, thanks to Bunny. 

The directorial debut of Ben Jacobson, Bunny centers on an East Village tenement resident whose very bad birthday is a tapestry of chaos, community, and characters that are undeniably the fabric of New York City. Like the iconic cinema listed above, Bunny channels the energy of this great city, while also embracing its funkier elements. This fantastic, funny, and surprising indie is also an unapologetic and unsentimental love letter to New York. 

But what's it about? 

Bunny is a story of a hustler and the motley community that loves him. 

Co-writer Mo Stark stars a Bunny, an East Village resident whose life — and tenement apartment — is very, very hectic. "Today I fucked up," Bunny explains in a voiceover over home movies of his wife Bobbie (a sizzling Liza Colby), his best friend Dino (co-writer/director Ben Jacobson), and their maternal landlady Linda (Linda Rong Mei Chen). "I upended the lives of the people I love most, my family." 

At the start of the day, this eponymous protagonist is racing down the street. His long, dirty-blond hair whips behind him as blood dribbles from his chin and goatee, down his neck, and onto a cream-colored knitted top. We won't learn what he's running from until later. But it relates to his job, being a "gigolo, like Richard Gere, but not that fancy." 

Bunny won't slow down to explain what's going on. Instead, no sooner has he washed the blood from his body than Bobbie — wearing translucent lingerie and a big smile — introduces him to his birthday present, a threesome with her friend Daphne (Eleonore Hendricks) and "the best Molly that can be found in the tri-state area." But Bunny's in no mood to party. There's business to attend to. 

For starters, an Airbnb guest named Happy Chana — never just "Chana" — is coming to rent their spare room. As an Orthodox Jew, she (Genevieve Hudson-Price) has specific needs that Bunny must meet or else lose the needed rental fee. Then, while Bobbie's out, her estranged father (Tony Drazan) drops by, only to be swept up by Dino's influence — and his edibles. Before Bunny can catch his breath, there are a couple of corpses to deal with and a murder to cover up. It's a real bad birthday, but at least he has his family to help him through. 

Chaotic comedy makes Bunny brilliant. 

This East Village tenement is stocked floor to ceiling with colorful characters who have little in common but their love for each other. Bunny and Bobbie are adored by real-talking Linda, impulsive but protective Dino, an elderly neighbor with moxie named Ian (Richard Price), and a trio of twentysomething party girls, all of whom will have a part to play in helping Bunny through the worst birthday of his life. Far from hiding a homicide from them, Bunny drops a corpse of a "bad man" on the linoleum floor for a brainstorming session. How do they dump a body in this bustling neighborhood — especially when there's a pair of chummy cops (Liz Caribel Sierra and Ajay Naidu) hanging around outside? 

Stark, Jacobson, and co-writer Stefan Marolachakis create a script that is joltingly alive. Cultures collide from scene to scene with the enthralling melting pot energy of hundreds of NYC neighborhoods. As a character-driven film, there's a panoply of minor conflicts, about birthday plans, roommate etiquette, and the best way to fold a corpse into a rolling suitcase. But when it comes to helping one of their own, these free spirits, neurotics, and weirdos all come together as the family they are, bound by years of shared space and energy. 

The superb casting of this film lends authenticity, avoiding famous faces and leaning into an effusive and even volatile chemistry amid the ensemble. Watching Bunny, New Yorkers might not only recognize figures from their own neighborhoods, but will also feel a part of this tenement, tangled in the intoxicating energy of excitement, gossip, and community. New York is a city of strangers who form families, and Bunny explores those bonds through a funny and unpredictable family drama. Because what's a corpse between friends?

Mo Stark is a star in Bunny. 

Too often, when filmmakers write and star in their movies, the result can be a bloated vanity project (Belfast) or a treacly bit of fluff that paints their character as an underappreciated genius (Cha Cha Real Smooth). Bunny avoids these pitfalls as Stark and Jacobson firmly commit to the goofball core of their characters. 

Bunny is a himbo with a heart of gold but a much messier past than Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman. Dino is ride-or-die, but also dangerously impulsive. Together, they are a duo I'd watch go on a bodega run, just because they are so vivid and fun. Every moment together vibrates with their deep love for each other, and a broader, radiant interest in those around them. This is the New York I know and love, and it's a pleasure to see it captured, warts and all. Because yeah, for every hot baddie stomping down the sidewalk to the beat of her own drum, there's a mercurial oddball looking to fart into a cop car window or otherwise quirk up your day. 

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Yet within this swirl of eccentrics, Stark keeps his head above water, maintaining a focus and direction as Bunny forges ahead. Far from taking control of a situation like some stodgy suit or cop might, Bunny is more wrangling alley cats as he leaps from problems personal, professional, and criminal with the agility of an Alvin Ailey dancer. He's a rock to his tenement mates. And the joyful reveal of this crime-comedy is that when he needs a rock, they will be that for him, too. Stark so beautifully grounds the film in its unconventional opening of voiceover and unexplained blood that for the whole film, whatever wild shit goes down, we are bound to Bunny, rooting for him just like the rest of his circle does. We truly feel like one of them, caught up in the warmth and ferocity of their bond. 

Simply put, Bunny is a quirky, gritty indie crime-comedy/New York family drama that achieves a lot with a little. Primarily set in one location, with no major stars in its charismatic ensemble, it's an underdog story both on and off screen. You feel the hustle of Bunny in every frame. Alive, exciting, funny, and original, Bunny is gem not to be overlooked. 

Bunny opens in select theaters and on VOD on Nov. 14. However, early access screenings in New York begin on Nov. 7.

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Bunny 独立电影 纽约 喜剧 犯罪 家庭剧 Ben Jacobson Mo Stark Indie Film New York Comedy Crime Family Drama
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