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Buffalo '66 Poster

Buffalo '66

Billy Brown just got out of jail. Now he’s going to serve some real time. He’s going home.
1998 | 110m | English

(65396 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

Billy is released after five years in prison. In the next moment, he kidnaps teenage student Layla and visits his parents with her, pretending she is his girlfriend and they will soon marry.
Release Date: Jan 20, 1998
Director: Vincent Gallo
Writer: Vincent Gallo, Alison Bagnall
Genres: Comedy, Drama, Romance
Keywords gambling, winter, kidnapping, strip club, new york state, ex-con, bowling alley, prison release, buffalo, new york, bowling, bathtub, day in a life, prison, tap dancing, character study
Production Companies Muse Productions, Gray Daisy Films
Box Office Revenue: $2,375,097
Budget: $1,500,000
Updates Updated: Aug 09, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Vincent Gallo Billy Brown
Christina Ricci Layla
Ben Gazzara Jimmy Brown
Anjelica Huston Jan Brown
Rosanna Arquette Wendy Balsam
Jan-Michael Vincent Sonny
Kevin Corrigan Rocky the Goon
Mickey Rourke The Bookie
Kevin Pollak TV Sportscaster
Alex Karras TV Sportscaster
John Sansone Little Billy
Manny Fried The Donut Clerk
John Rummel Don Shanks
Bob Wahl Scott Woods
Penny Wolfgang The Judge
Anthony Mydcarz The Motel Clerk
Michael Maciejewski The Guy in the Bathroom
Jack Claxton The Denny's Host
Dominic Telesco The Prison Guard
Carl Marchi The Cafe Owner
Kim Krah The Denny's Waitress
Julius Digennaro The Info Booth Clerk
Terry Braunstein The Tap Teacher
Jack Hunter The Gas Station Clerk
Norma Gelose The Bus Station Woman
Jamie King Tap Dance Kid
Janel King Tap Dance Kid
Joey Giambra The Man in the Donut Shop
Name Job
Rick Ash Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Curtiss Clayton Editor
Hamilton Sterling Sound Editor
Jeanne Develle Set Decoration
Toshiaki Ozawa Gaffer, Lighting Camera
John Clemens First Assistant Camera
Hilary Schroeder Assistant Editor
Adam Greenhaus Second Unit Director
Anthony Fantuzzo In Memory Of
Catherine Gore Script Supervisor
Michael Kriston Hairstylist
Gideon Ponte Production Design
Michaelangelo Bolla First Assistant Director
Jennifer Gerould Second Assistant Director
Josephine Colangelo In Memory Of
Rachel Kregal Set Costumer
Marie Morreale In Memory Of
Brian Miksis Production Sound Mixer
Lynn Campbell Makeup Artist
Vincent Gallo Director, Screenplay, Original Music Composer, Story
Alison Bagnall Screenplay
Lance Acord Director of Photography
James Chinlund Art Direction
Alexis Scott Costume Design
Avram Butch Kaplan Unit Production Manager
Allen Hartz Dialogue Editor
Thom Brennan Foley Editor
Robert Pfeffer Accountant
Gino Nix Key Grip
Tim Oravetz Propmaker
Name Title
Lauren Buckley Associate Producer
Jeff Sackman Executive Producer
John Dunning Executive Producer
Timothy Wayne Peternel Associate Producer
Michael Paseornek Executive Producer
Jordan Gertner Co-Producer
André Link Executive Producer
Janet Gallo Associate Producer
Vincent Gallo Producer
Deborah Brock Co-Producer
Chris Hanley Producer
Lauren Buckley Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 29 45 21
2024 5 28 50 19
2024 6 31 58 17
2024 7 27 51 18
2024 8 21 31 15
2024 9 15 26 9
2024 10 19 33 9
2024 11 16 22 12
2024 12 16 21 9
2025 1 19 37 10
2025 2 14 20 3
2025 3 6 19 1
2025 4 4 6 1
2025 5 3 7 2
2025 6 3 4 2
2025 7 2 3 2
2025 8 2 3 2
2025 9 3 3 2

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 655 799
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 760 826
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 812 845
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 538 716

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Reviews

Wuchak
6.0

Mostly tedious, but Ricci is adorable, “Heart of the Sunrise” is featured and the message is potent An angry sad sack (Vincent Gallo) is released after five years in prison near Buffalo and proceeds to kidnap a cute girl at a ballet studio (Christina Ricci). She surprisingly agrees to go along wi ... th the charade of being his wife to fool his nutty parents. His sole ambition seems to be to kill a field goal kicker for the Bills who let him down five years earlier. Anjelica Huston, Mickey Rourke, Jan-Michael Vincent and Rosanna Arquette have brief roles. “Buffalo ’66” (1998) is an offbeat indie written & directed by its star, Gallo. I only know him from Coppola’s “Tetro” (2009) where he proved to have an almost Brando-like charisma (I said “almost”). Ricci is one of the highlights here as she’s petite, voluptuous and adorable. Unfortunately, most of the episodes in the story could’ve been cut by one-third or even one-half. As it is, they become tedious, such as the loong segment at the parent’s house. But the final act wins the day with Yes’ “Heart of the Sunrise” placed strategically and a profound moral about the power of uncompromising love to change a piece of sheet. The film runs 1 hour, 50 minutes and was shot in Buffalo, New York, and surround areas (Gowanda, Lackawanna and Woodlawn). GRADE: C+/B-

Jun 23, 2021
Geronimo1967
7.0

"Billy" (Vincent Gallo) gets let out of prison and promises to bring his new wife to meet his mother. An hasty promise for two reasons. First - well, he hasn't actually got a wife and second - he is desperate to pee. Intent on sorting out the latter problem, he encounters "Layla" (Christina Ricci) w ... hom he promptly thinks can solve his other problem, so he frog marches her to her car and hopes that she - by now at gunpoint - will agree to help him out. Risky strategy, that! Can it work out for him? Well what now follows is an entertainingly quirky road movie that sees the two gradually bond whilst we learn about both of their rather complicated pasts. It's not just his mother (Angelica Huston) that he wants to visit; he also has a score to settle with a bookie (Mickey Rourke) but maybe, just maybe, his new companion might adjust his priorities? This is a well paced, intimate movie and there is a good, almost magnetic, dynamic between Gallo and Ricci. The story is lively and engaging offering us an offbeat love story that is, though maybe a touch predictable, based more on two characterful performances rather than cheesy sentiment (of which there is none!) and gooey love scenes as they head for their own kind of redemption. Coffee and doughnuts anyone?

Jul 22, 2023