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Drugstore Cowboy (1989)
In director Gus Van Sant's realistic cult film about
drug abuse:
- the plot told as a long flashback (Bob's opening
line: "I was once a shameless full-time dope fiend"),
beginning and ending in an ambulance, narrated by young and smart
junkie leader Bob Hughes (Matt Dillon), - as he described his life
with three other drug-addicted, doped-up teen junkies (considered
a "family") who criminally robbed pharmacies of prescription
drugs in the early 70s mostly in the area around Portland, Oregon
to supply their ever-increasing habits of dope usage and addiction
- the scene of dope user Bob's hallucinatory experience
("Life was beautiful") after shooting up his arm in the
back seat of a getaway car after a drug robbery, with his voice-over
and floating, rotating snowflake-images of a cow, a tree, a house,
a dog, and a plane on the window glass: "After
any kind of drug haul, everyone in the crew indulged. I laughed to
myself as I pictured blues and Dilaudid in such great amounts on
the spoon that it would literally be overflowing. Upon entering my
vein, the drug would start a warm itch that would surge along until
the brain consumed it in a gentle explosion. It began in the back
of the neck and rose rapidly until I felt such pleasure that the
whole world sympathized and took on a soft, lofty appeal. Everything
was grand then. Your worst enemy -- he wasn't so bad. The ants in
the grass -- they were just, you know, doin' their thing. Everything
took on the rosy hue of unlimited success. You could do no wrong,
and as long as it lasted, life was beautiful"
- Bob's description of himself as the "undisputed
leader"
of the group of losers, including his girlfriend/wife Dianne (Kelly
Lynch), their sweet-natured side-kick friend Rick (James LeGros), and
Rick's teenaged blonde, runaway /drifter-girlfriend Nadine (Heather
Graham): ("She was a piece of work. She had no record, just a
smile that caught us all a little off guard")
- with memorable lines of dialogue about how they were
turned on more by drugs than sex: (Dianne: "You never f--k me,
and I always have to drive,"
and Bob: "Most people don't know how they are going to feel from
one moment to the next, but a dope fiend has a pretty good idea. All
you've got to do is look at the labels on the little bottles")
- the scene of Bob's conversation about how the two
younger members of the "family," Rick and Nadine, were
brought up as amoral "TV babies": ("All these kids,
they're all TV babies. Watching people killing and f--king each other
on the boob tube for so long, it's all they know. Hell, they think
it's legal. They think it's the right thing to do") and their
belief in 30-day hex-superstitions/curses about No Dogs and Never
Put a Hat on a Bed
- the tragic scene of Dianne and Bob visiting his heartbroken,
scolding mother (Grace Zabriskie) when she lowered the blinds and
locked doors when he came to get some clothes ("He is a thief
and a dope fiend, and that is more important to him than I am")
- the scene of Bob and Dianne struggling to smuggle
Nadine's drug-overdosed, stiffened corpse in a blue garment bag out
of their motel room and into the trunk of their car - during a deputy
sheriff's convention - so Bob could bury the body in the woods
- the resolution with Bob turning himself into an authorized
methadone treatment program to go straight - and breaking up the
family - although he was eventually shot by a drug-demanding kid-pusher
wearing a mask in the final scene and taken away on a stretcher and
placed in an ambulance, as he mused, in voice-over (the film's final
line of dialogue): "I was still alive. I hope they can keep
me alive," while there were homemade Super-8 shots of Bob and
his friends from earlier, happier times in the credits
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Dope User Bob
(Matt Dillon)
Dianne (Kelly Lynch) and Bob
Nadine (Heather Graham) and Rick (James LeGros)
Nadine's Tragic Overdose - in a Body Bag
Bob Shot by Masked Kid-Pusher
Bob on Stretcher
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