13 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :- Toronto 2000 Wrap-Up, 15 October 2000
Author:
Carson Jones (DJFreak) from New York City
9/14 9:00 am
CHINESE COFFEE (*****)
Unlike most films of plays that fail to break free of stagy
theatrics, this film draws its strength from a wonderful
script and an intimate tone of Off-Off-Broadway theatre.
The combination of Al Pacino and Jerry Orbach together for
a solid hour and a half could not be more special. Susan
Floyd is also wonderful as Pacino's bohemian love.
Painter, long time friend of Pacino and "Before Night Falls"
director, Julian Schnabel, introduced the film on behalf of
Pacino, who had to return to L.A. to shoot a movie.
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- A staged play start to finish, 23 November 2007
Author:
(futures@exis.net) from Ronn Ives/FUTURES Antiques, Norfolk, VA.
A Broadway play turned into a film starring Al Pacino and Jerry Orbach.
Think of this script as sort of a "Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf"
between two heterosexual men. In the span of two hours (with
flashbacks) layer after layer of their relatively short friendship is
peeled away to raw feelings and pseudo-honest expressions until a few
truths may have been reached. My only problem with it is in the style
of the dialog much of the time feeling the scripts are invisible but
right in front of them. The timing is too "ready" and snappy, the
comebacks polished, the exchanges sculpted with care. Had it (they)
been relaxed, awkward, slow to respond, overly fast to respond, etc., I
could've believed it. As it is, I never lost awareness this was a
staged play.
A Lost Classic, 4 August 2008
Author:
movie_jay from Toronto, Canada
This is the only movie I've ever gone to see twice at a film festival.
It played in Toronto at the 2000 film festival, and my friend and I
talked about it for hours afterwards. It's an invigorating movie, based
on the play by Ira Lewis, about two bohemian guys, approaching 50,
adrift in the early 80's, yet stuck in the past.
It's a "talkie" movie that could play on a double-bill with "My Dinner
With Andre", a two-hander about a book Pacino has written and the first
encounter with his friend, played by Jerry Orbach, since the Pacino
character has lent it to him. But it's about so much more than that:
it's about writing, dreaming, the creative process, relationships,
loneliness, poverty, and finally, values. There isn't a moment that
we're not involved with these two guys as they negotiate their
relationship. The script crackles with life and wit, observation and
nuance. Pacino first directed the great documentary "Looking For
Richard", about how to approach staging a Shakespeare play. And here in
"Chinese Coffee" he proves once again that he has a natural ability to
tell a story in a completely fresh and interesting way, free of the
constraints and pettiness of a routine plot.
If you're an actor and you haven't seen this movie, than shame on you,
this one will have you going for days. And you'll return to it, too.
It's a buried treasure in a great career for Pacino. I can't recommend
it any higher.
Echo "Futures" Comment, 9 June 2008
Author:
CRCFleetwood from United States
I just watched this on DVD, and although it offered some interesting
moments and insights, the dialog felt forced and the two main actors,
both of whom have done great work in other projects, didn't seem to
click. On the DVD, there's an epilogue in the "features" section in
which Pacino, who also directed, wondered whether there were too many
flashbacks. Actually, I thought the flashbacks were enlivening,
enabling the story to be more involving than it might otherwise have
been. Pacino also mentions that because of Orbach's "Law and Order"
shooting schedule, they were forced to film 84 pages of dialog in 21
days, perhaps explaining, at least in part, why the film feels a little
undercooked.
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Chinese Coffee (2000)
13 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :-
Toronto 2000 Wrap-Up, 15 October 2000
Author: Carson Jones (DJFreak) from New York City
9/14 9:00 am CHINESE COFFEE (*****)
Unlike most films of plays that fail to break free of stagy theatrics, this film draws its strength from a wonderful script and an intimate tone of Off-Off-Broadway theatre. The combination of Al Pacino and Jerry Orbach together for a solid hour and a half could not be more special. Susan Floyd is also wonderful as Pacino's bohemian love. Painter, long time friend of Pacino and "Before Night Falls" director, Julian Schnabel, introduced the film on behalf of Pacino, who had to return to L.A. to shoot a movie.
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-
A staged play start to finish, 23 November 2007
Author: (futures@exis.net) from Ronn Ives/FUTURES Antiques, Norfolk, VA.
A Broadway play turned into a film starring Al Pacino and Jerry Orbach. Think of this script as sort of a "Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf" between two heterosexual men. In the span of two hours (with flashbacks) layer after layer of their relatively short friendship is peeled away to raw feelings and pseudo-honest expressions until a few truths may have been reached. My only problem with it is in the style of the dialog much of the time feeling the scripts are invisible but right in front of them. The timing is too "ready" and snappy, the comebacks polished, the exchanges sculpted with care. Had it (they) been relaxed, awkward, slow to respond, overly fast to respond, etc., I could've believed it. As it is, I never lost awareness this was a staged play.
A Lost Classic, 4 August 2008

Author: movie_jay from Toronto, Canada
This is the only movie I've ever gone to see twice at a film festival. It played in Toronto at the 2000 film festival, and my friend and I talked about it for hours afterwards. It's an invigorating movie, based on the play by Ira Lewis, about two bohemian guys, approaching 50, adrift in the early 80's, yet stuck in the past.
It's a "talkie" movie that could play on a double-bill with "My Dinner With Andre", a two-hander about a book Pacino has written and the first encounter with his friend, played by Jerry Orbach, since the Pacino character has lent it to him. But it's about so much more than that: it's about writing, dreaming, the creative process, relationships, loneliness, poverty, and finally, values. There isn't a moment that we're not involved with these two guys as they negotiate their relationship. The script crackles with life and wit, observation and nuance. Pacino first directed the great documentary "Looking For Richard", about how to approach staging a Shakespeare play. And here in "Chinese Coffee" he proves once again that he has a natural ability to tell a story in a completely fresh and interesting way, free of the constraints and pettiness of a routine plot.
If you're an actor and you haven't seen this movie, than shame on you, this one will have you going for days. And you'll return to it, too. It's a buried treasure in a great career for Pacino. I can't recommend it any higher.
Echo "Futures" Comment, 9 June 2008

Author: CRCFleetwood from United States
I just watched this on DVD, and although it offered some interesting moments and insights, the dialog felt forced and the two main actors, both of whom have done great work in other projects, didn't seem to click. On the DVD, there's an epilogue in the "features" section in which Pacino, who also directed, wondered whether there were too many flashbacks. Actually, I thought the flashbacks were enlivening, enabling the story to be more involving than it might otherwise have been. Pacino also mentions that because of Orbach's "Law and Order" shooting schedule, they were forced to film 84 pages of dialog in 21 days, perhaps explaining, at least in part, why the film feels a little undercooked.
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