
Color, 1976/1978, 134/109m.
Directed by John Cassavetes
Starring Ben Gazzara, Seymour Cassel, Timothy Carey, Robert Phillips, Morgan Woodward, Meade Roberts
BFI (Blu-Ray & DVD) (UK RB/R2 HD/PAL), Criterion (DVD) (US R1 NTSC), Optimum (UK R2 PAL) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9), Pionieer (US R0 NTSC)
Following the successful of the independently made and released A Woman under the Influence in 1974, director
John Cassavetes reunited with Husbands actor Ben Gazzara for what would prove to be perhaps his divisive and difficult film, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie. On the surface it's a gritty crime film in the same mold as other '70s films as Fingers and Mean Streets (the latter a logical connection since this was initially conceived with Martin Scorsese while he was finishing that film), even treading closer to drive-in territory than anything else in Cassavetes' directorial career (except for perhaps Gloria). However, it's still anchored with the improvisation and probing character studies found in his other work. The film was rushed to completion and briefly released in a 134-minute version, earning largely negative reviews and disappearing from screens after a few days. Two years later, Cassavetes revisited it with a refined 109-minute cut, paring down the first act considerably and using additional and alternate scenes to clarify some points left obscure in the first release version. That version wasn't a success either, but the film's revival on VHS and then DVD caused its reputation to soar even as fans continue to debate which version is actually preferable.
context with the unhinged presence of Carey next to him; a genuinely crazed cinematic presence, Carey had previously appeared in Cassavetes' Minnie and Moskovitz and provided a jolt to such cult classics as Head
and The World's Greatest Sinner. The revised version of the film gives him much more screen time, which will put it on top for many viewers, though he has some creepy flourishes only in the first cut as well.