Detailed item info | Movie description | Miguel Piñero was a New York City poet and playwright who wrote what he knew: a world of "stabbing, shooting and dying." This gritty, non-linear biographical film presents Piñero's dark charisma and even darker life in all it's angry glory. A junkie, a drug dealer, and a thief, Piñero (played by Benjamin Bratt) spent time in SIng-SIng prison, an experience which was the basis of his most famous play, SHORT EYES, which won the Tony award in 1974. Piñero also pioneered the spoken-word poetry (the forebearer to rap and hip-hop) of the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, which he helped found.
Mixing digital video in color with 16mm film in black and white, the film creates a convincingly harsh and lively portrait of life on the mean streets of Lower East Side Manhattan in the 1970s and '80s. There were a number of people in Piñero's life who recognized his genius and tried to save him from self-destruction: his mother (Rita Moreno), theater impresario Joseph Papp (Mandy Patinkin), and his longtime girlfriend (Talisa Soto). But the allure of crime and drugs won him over, and Piñero finally crashed and burned, dying young in 1988. This film is a passionate tribute to a passionate artist who remains an important Puerto Rican-American icon.
| | Credits | | Producer: | Fisher Stevens | | Cast: | Giancarlo Esposito, Jaime Sanchez, Rita Moreno |
| | Notes | DVD Features:
Region 1 Keep Case Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85:1 Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English Additional Release Material: Documentary - 1. "A Look at Miguel Pinero The Man" Trailers Interactive Features: Scene Access Interactive Menus
Theatrical release: December 7, 2001 (NY/LA)
| | Editorial reviews | "...PINERO is an impressionist memoir reminiscent of BASQUIAT....In a career-making performance, Benjamin Bratt inhabits the tile role with mesmerizing fury..." Box Office - Susan Green (12/01/2001)
"...Mr. Bratt's Pinero retains a layer of sinuous craftiness..." New York Times - Stephen Holden (12/13/2001)
"...[PINERO] shows off Benjamin Bratt's considerable acting chops..." Rolling Stone - Peter Travers (01/17/2002)
"...[An] intriguing film....Ichaso has created a cinematic vision of Pinero's life that brilliantly captures the passion, energy, tragic weaknesses and overwhelming emotions that clearly flowed from this artist's soul..." Chicago Sun-Times - Bill Zwecker (01/25/2002)
"...Bratt brings electric life to the tortured Pinero..." Entertainment Weekly - Mike Flaherty (07/19/2002)
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