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Chelsea Walls
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| Chelsea Walls | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Ethan Hawke |
| Written by | Nicole Burdette |
| Based on | Cheslea Walls by Nicole Burdette |
| Produced by |
|
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Tom Richmond |
| Edited by | Adriana Pacheco |
| Music by | Jeff Tweedy |
Production companies | |
| Distributed by | Lions Gate Films |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 109 minutes [1] |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $100,000[2] |
| Box office | $60,902[3] |
Chelsea Walls is a 2001 American drama film directed by Ethan Hawke in his directorial debut and written by Nicole Burdette, based on her 1990 play of the same name. It stars Kris Kristofferson, Uma Thurman, Robert Sean Leonard, Tuesday Weld in her final film, Kevin Corrigan, Bianca Hunter, Vincent D'Onofrio, Natasha Richardson and Rosario Dawson. The story takes place in the historic Chelsea Hotel in Manhattan.
Cheslea Walls premiered at the 2001 Woodstock Film Festival, and was released in theaters in the United States on April 19, 2002, by Lions Gate Films.
Plot
[edit]The film tells five stories of a number of artists as they spend a single day in New York's famed bohemian home Chelsea Hotel, struggling with their arts and personal lives.
Cast
[edit]- Kris Kristofferson as Bud
- Uma Thurman as Grace
- Robert Sean Leonard as Terry Olsen
- Vincent D'Onofrio as Frank
- Natasha Richardson as Mary
- Rosario Dawson as Audrey
- Mark Webber as Val
- Frank Whaley as Lynny Barnum
- Kevin Corrigan as "Crutches"
- Guillermo Díaz as Kid
- Bianca Hunter as Lorna Doone
- Matthew Del Negro as Rookie Cop
- Paz de la Huerta as Girl
- Paul Failla as Cop
- Duane McLaughlin as Wall
- Jimmy Scott as "Skinny Bones"
- John Seitz as Dean
- Mark Strand as Journalist
- Heather Watts as Ballerina
- Tuesday Weld as Greta
- Harris Yulin as Bud's Editor
- Steve Zahn as Ross
- Sam Connelly, Richard Linklater, and Peter Salett as Cronies
Reception
[edit]On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, 26% of 47 critics gave the film a positive review, with an average rating of 4.2/10, earning it a score of "Rotten". The website's critics consensus reads, "The meandering Chelsea Walls is more pretentious than poetic."[4] On Metacritic, the film holds a weighted average score of 34 out of 100, based on 18 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[5]
Roger Ebert gave the film three stars out of four, claiming: "Movies like this do not grab you by the throat. You have to be receptive. The first time I saw "Chelsea Walls," in a stuffy room late at night at Cannes 2001, I found it slow and pointless. This time, I saw it earlier in the day, fueled by coffee, and I understood that the movie is not about what the characters do, but about what they are. It may be a waste of time to spend your life drinking, fornicating, posing as a genius and living off your friends, but if you've got the money, honey, take off the time."[6]
References
[edit]- ^ "CHELSEA WALLS (15)". British Board of Film Classification. June 24, 2003. Archived from the original on July 19, 2012. Retrieved February 12, 2012.
- ^ Roger Ebert (June 7, 2002). "Chelsea Walls". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on February 27, 2011. Retrieved February 10, 2010.
- ^ "Chelsea Walls (2002)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved July 5, 2011.
- ^ Chelsea Walls at Rotten Tomatoes
- ^ "Chelsea Walls". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved December 4, 2023.
- ^ Roger Ebert review of Chelsea Walls, RogerEbert.com; accessed July 4, 2015.
External links
[edit]Chelsea Walls
View on GrokipediaBackground and development
Source material
"Chelsea Walls" originated as a play written by Nicole Burdette, which premiered on June 9, 1990, at the Naked Angels theater in New York City, directed by Ed Sherin and featuring a cast of 29 actors.[4] The production employed an elaborate set design by George Xenos, depicting the open-walled interiors of the Chelsea Hotel, with action unfolding around audience members to immerse viewers in the environment.[4] The play consists of interconnected vignettes portraying the bohemian lives of hotel residents—such as writers, dancers, musicians, and comedians—capturing their artistic struggles, delusions of grandeur, and nostalgic reflections on creativity amid the hotel's fading vibrancy.[4] Burdette adapted her play into a screenplay for the 2001 film, transforming the theatrical work into a cinematic piece by expanding character arcs and incorporating visual and atmospheric elements better suited to the medium, such as a non-linear, multi-story structure inspired by musical albums.[5] While the play emphasizes energetic, overlapping dialogues and stage-bound intimacy, the screenplay shifts toward a more fragmented, dreamlike narrative that highlights sensory details and the hotel's mythic aura.[5] These changes allow for deeper exploration of individual aspirations and interpersonal connections within the ensemble.[5] The story's setting draws from the real Chelsea Hotel, a historic Manhattan residence long renowned as a haven for bohemian artists, including musicians like Bob Dylan and Patti Smith, whose tenures there embodied the creative ferment that informs the work's themes.[6] This context underscores the play and screenplay's focus on the hotel as a microcosm of artistic ambition and transience.[4] Ethan Hawke chose the project as his directorial debut, captivated by Burdette's evocative writing.[5]Pre-production
Ethan Hawke made his feature film directorial debut with Chelsea Walls, drawn to the project by his longstanding admiration for Nicole Burdette's 1990 play of the same name, which he first encountered during a reading and saw as a vivid portrayal of artistic ambition and failure in New York's bohemian underbelly.[5] Hawke, who had been fascinated by the Chelsea Hotel since visiting it in 1988 as a symbol of indie artistic spirit, initially considered recommending the material to another director like Wim Wenders but was encouraged by Burdette herself to helm the adaptation, allowing him to capture the raw, intimate essence of New York City's creative enclave.[5] The film was financed through independent sources on a modest budget of $100,000, utilizing the InDigEnt (Independent Digital Entertainment) no-budget production model, which emphasized cost-effective digital filmmaking with miniDV cameras to enable quick, low-overhead shooting.[5] Producers from Killer Films, including Christine Vachon and Pamela Koffler, contributed to the effort alongside IFC Films and Indigent, supporting Hawke's vision for an ensemble-driven project that prioritized artistic authenticity over commercial scale.[7] Nicole Burdette handled the screenplay adaptation herself, transforming her stage play into a cinematic script that preserved its core ensemble structure of interconnected vignettes unfolding over a single day, while shifting the focus to four primary stories set within the hotel to enhance visual and narrative flow on screen.[5] This process maintained the play's spiritual and thematic integrity, emphasizing the transient lives of artists, musicians, and dreamers in a decaying yet iconic space.[5] Pre-production included initial location scouting at the actual Chelsea Hotel in Manhattan, where Hawke and the team identified authentic interiors—such as period bathrooms and hallways—to serve as the film's primary setting, evoking the hotel's historic role as a haven for bohemian figures like Jack Kerouac and drawing on its real-world aura to ground the adaptation.[5]Production
Filming
Principal photography for Chelsea Walls took place primarily at the historic Chelsea Hotel, located at 222 West 23rd Street in Manhattan, New York City, utilizing the building's actual rooms, hallways, and common areas to preserve its bohemian authenticity.[5][8] Production commenced in mid-2000 over a compressed schedule of three weeks, enabling the crew to capture the hotel's quirky, lived-in environment—still home to artists and eccentrics—amid its faded grandeur and eclectic resident interactions.[9] Cinematographer Tom Richmond shot the film on miniDV digital video, later transferred to 35mm, employing handheld cameras alongside Steadicam for fluid movement through the confined spaces, fostering a raw, documentary-like intimacy among the ensemble cast.[5][8] This approach, with its stylized palettes varying by storyline (such as gold tones for certain scenes and black-and-white for others), emphasized natural lighting and the hotel's textured decay to evoke emotional immediacy without artificial gloss.[5] As a first-time director, Ethan Hawke faced challenges in orchestrating the film's non-linear, interwoven stories unfolding over a single day, requiring abstract guidance for the audience while adapting to digital video's limitations for heightened closeness.[5] He incorporated improvisational elements to enhance spontaneity, such as allowing actors Robert Sean Leonard and Steve Zahn to improvise a songwriting scene with guitars in a Chelsea Hotel bathroom, yielding unscripted musical moments.[5] On set, the cast showed investment in the project's intimate, unpolished aesthetic; Hawke later relished directing Tuesday Weld's charged confrontation with Kris Kristofferson amid the hotel's storied, unpredictable vibe.[5]Post-production and music
The post-production of Chelsea Walls involved editor Adriana Pacheco assembling the film's raw digital video footage into a non-linear mosaic that interweaves five vignettes, prioritizing atmospheric mood and character immersion over conventional plot progression.[1] This approach reflected the source play's episodic structure, transforming the low-budget shoot's improvisational energy into a cohesive 109-minute runtime that evokes the bohemian essence of the Chelsea Hotel.[8] No significant reshoots or major adjustments were reported during this phase. The film's original score was composed by Jeff Tweedy of Wilco, in collaboration with drummer Glenn Kotche, featuring improvised instrumentals that blend indie rock, jazz-infused guitar work, and atmospheric textures to capture the residents' introspective lives.[10][11] Tweedy's contributions, including electric guitar-driven pieces and subtle acoustic layers, were created on the fly during scoring sessions, enhancing the film's moody, reflective tone without overpowering the dialogue-heavy scenes.[12] The soundtrack, released by Hollywood Records in 2002 and reissued by Omnivore Recordings in 2021 with bonus tracks, also incorporates vocal performances by cast member Robert Sean Leonard.[13]Synopsis and cast
Plot
Chelsea Walls is structured as five loosely interconnected vignettes unfolding over a single day within the walls of New York City's Chelsea Hotel, a haven for aspiring artists confronting creative blocks, romantic turmoil, and the harsh realities of their pursuits.[1] The narrative centers on a diverse ensemble of residents, including poets, musicians, a painter, a writer, and a jazz performer, whose lives intersect in fleeting encounters that underscore the hotel's role as a transient creative community.[14] In one thread, two young poets, Grace and Audrey, navigate entangled romances that mirror their artistic frustrations. Grace hesitates between her devoted artist companion Frank, who offers genuine support, and a former lover now distant in Hollywood, leading to moments of introspection amid her writing struggles. Meanwhile, Audrey allows the nomadic poet Val to return to her room, despite knowing he will soon leave again with his companion Crutches, perpetuating a cycle of emotional and creative disruption.[15] Their shared living space becomes a confessional ground for debating love's interference with poetry.[16] Another vignette follows Bud, a seasoned but alcoholic writer long ensconced in the hotel, who juggles his wife Greta and mistress Mary as dual muses for his ambitious 800-page novel. His day devolves into boozy reflections and awkward overlaps between the women, highlighting more personal dead-ends than literary breakthroughs, as he types away in his cluttered room.[14] Interwoven with this is the story of a down-and-out jazz musician, whose hazy existence in the hotel's underbelly involves aimless wandering and fleeting interactions with other residents, amplifying his sense of isolation amid creative stagnation.[1] The remaining threads feature Terry, an aspiring folk troubadour, and Ross, a troubled singer, both fresh from Minnesota and eager to absorb the Chelsea's bohemian legacy. They explore the building's eccentric corridors, encountering oddball inhabitants like a house philosopher in the elevator and spectral echoes of past artists, while grappling with their own ambitions—Terry strumming guitar in search of inspiration, and Ross battling inner demons that cloud his performances. A painter's subplot adds tension through his persistent but unreciprocated pursuit of Grace, culminating in vulnerable exchanges that expose the hotel's communal fragility.[16] Together, these stories form a mosaic of aspirations clashing with failures, bound by the Chelsea's enduring allure as a refuge for the artistically displaced.[1]Cast and characters
Chelsea Walls features an ensemble cast of artists, writers, and bohemians residing in New York's iconic Chelsea Hotel, embodying archetypes of creative struggle and introspection. Kris Kristofferson portrays Bud, a boozy, hard-drinking novelist grappling with unfinished manuscripts and personal demons. Uma Thurman plays Grace, an insecure poet and waitress navigating romantic uncertainties in the bohemian milieu. Vincent D'Onofrio stars as Frank, a passionate painter seeking connection amid his artistic pursuits.[17][1][8] Supporting roles enrich the tapestry of hotel life, with Rosario Dawson as Audrey, a young poet balancing her art and relationships; Natasha Richardson as Mary, Bud's mistress and a resident entangled in the hotel's emotional web; and Tuesday Weld as Greta, Bud's wife. Other notable cast members include Robert Sean Leonard as Terry, a musician; Steve Zahn as Ross, a troubled singer from Minnesota; Mark Webber as Val, a nomadic poet; Kevin Corrigan as Crutches, a quirky inhabitant; and Little Jimmy Scott as Skinny Bones, a down-and-out jazz musician.[8][2][18]| Actor | Character | Role Description |
|---|---|---|
| Kris Kristofferson | Bud | Alcoholic novelist and resident |
| Uma Thurman | Grace | Insecure poet and waitress |
| Vincent D'Onofrio | Frank | Struggling painter |
| Rosario Dawson | Audrey | Young poet |
| Natasha Richardson | Mary | Bud's mistress and hotel resident |
| Tuesday Weld | Greta | Bud's wife |
| Steve Zahn | Ross | Troubled singer from Minnesota |
| Robert Sean Leonard | Terry | Aspiring musician from Minnesota |
| Mark Webber | Val | Nomadic poet |
| Kevin Corrigan | Crutches | Quirky inhabitant |
| Little Jimmy Scott | Skinny Bones | Down-and-out jazz musician |
