The Guardian (USA)

Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain review – genius painted in broad strokes

- Cath Clarke

Here it is, finally arriving on Netflix, the Anthony Bourdain documentar­y that sparked controvers­y last year when director Morgan Neville revealed he’d used AI to bring the chef’s voice back to life – three poignant lines from an email he’d sent to an artist friend. “My life is sort of shit now. You are successful, and I am successful, and I’m wondering: are you happy?” Bourdain took his own life at the age of 61 in 2018. In the end, the AI deepfake gimmick is perhaps the most interestin­g thing about what is otherwise a conveyor-belt film with plenty of talking heads, some more fawning than others. (Rule of the thumb: the more famous the interviewe­e, the fewer the insights.)

Bourdain had been “a mediocre chef in a middling restaurant” – his words – when his memoir Kitchen Confidenti­al shot up the book charts. At the time, food was the new rock’n’roll, and Bourdain was like a cross between Iggy Pop and William Burroughs – a bad-boy former drug addict with a dry, laconic wit. At 43, he had thought all his adventures were behind him. Instead, Bourdain landed a TV show – A Cook’s Tour, later Anthony Bourdain: No Reservatio­ns – which took him around the world. The film-makers have done a terrific job here trawling through episodes, stitching together footage to create a portrait of a man who went out in the world with open eyes, hungry for encounters and meaning. The film is a reminder of just what a brilliant writer Bourdain was. He describes falling in love with Vietnam as being “pheromonic” and, like meeting the woman of his dreams, “inexplicab­ly it looks and smells right”. Fame led to the breakdown of his first marriage. The 250 days a year he spent on the road filming resulted in a friendly divorce from wife number two, mother of his daughter. I was uncomforta­ble with how some of his friends framed Bourdain’s final romance with the filmmaker Asia Argento; blame the woman.

Bourdain says at one point that the greatest sin is mediocrity – a little of that creeps into the film perhaps. Not that Bourdain would have cared. He professed not to give a hoot what happened to him after death: “Throw me into the woodchippe­r and spray me into Harrods in the rush hour.”

• Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain is available on 15 July on Netflix.

In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other internatio­nal helplines can be found at befriender­s.org.

 ?? Laconic traveler … Anthony Bourdain. Photograph: Courtesy of CNN/Focus Features/Courtesy of Focus Features ??
Laconic traveler … Anthony Bourdain. Photograph: Courtesy of CNN/Focus Features/Courtesy of Focus Features

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