Bitters and Blue Ruin
Bitters and Blue Ruin | |
---|---|
Directed by | Sean Kelley |
Produced by | Scott Elwell |
Written by |
Scott Elwell |
Music by | Cermit Fluffi |
Cinematography | Krista Mazzeo |
Edited by | Sean Kelley |
Running time | 140 minutes |
Language | English |
Bitters and Blue Ruin (2002) is a black-and-white neo-noir film shot in Philadelphia which centers on the ills of absinthe addiction.
Plot
Written by director Sean Kelley and producer Scott Elwell, the plot centers on Professor Roddy Schiffman (Bruce P. Wilson), a big wheel in the psychological community of the day, who is knee-deep in his latest research project: an academic text on pathological narcissism. Though his last book was a big hit, things don't look so rosy this time around; Roddy has writer's block.
Things take a further nosedive when Roddy loses control and decks graduate student Sal Unmarino, who slinks back to his advisor and Roddy's rival Professor Slavko P. Slavko (John Bravo). Sal spills his guts, painting a picture of a Roddy who's not only desperate to complete the book, but who has lapsed back into his old ways, hitting the cups hard.
Slavco senses that something is not quite right, but even he is shocked when a clandestine search through Roddy's office reveals that Roddy has been blowing Sal off and running with a former Hollywood pretty boy, now full-time nobody named Chester Trunche. What in blue blazes could Roddy be up to?...
What follows is the story of a desperate man searching to regain his former inspiration, but instead finds himself sinking deeper and deeper into the pit of dependency and hedonism as he becomes hooked on a potent and mysterious beverage known only as "The Blue Muse".
Roddy's quest for the Muse takes him from atop the lofty ivory towers of academia down to the lowest gutters of the seedy under-culture of Philadelphia. But whether he's at a swanky urbane soiree or in the company of garrulous prostitutes, Roddy always finds himself a man out at sea. His newly found Muse has quickly become his only true love.
And just when things start to turn around for him, Sal and Slavco call in the big guns in the form of one Dr. Emil Halbfass (Rick Bravo), dean of the school, a guy who himself has more than a few screws loose. The jig is truly up when Halbfass decides to commit Roddy to an insane asylum. This touches off a chain of events that brings everything crashing down on their heads.
History
The film takes its name from a line in the Tom Waits song "9th and Hennepin" which goes as follows: "And the clock ticks out like a dripping faucet/ 'til you're full of rag water and bitters and blue ruin"
The film had a world premiere on December 14, 2001, at International House at the University of Pennsylvania.
According to the Kelley and Elwell, an edited and colorized version of the film will likely be released commercially in 2008 under a new title. Initial reports are that the film's title will be changed to "The Third Degree." Additionally, filming will commence soon on Kelley and Elwell's long-rumored comedy "The Luxury Problem."