Portland, 1988. Filmmaker Gus Van Sant shoots Drugstore Cowboy, the project that will bring he and his collaborators a formidable burst of mainstream attention. Starring Matt Dillon, Kelly Lynch, and Heather Graham, the film follows a roving quartet of drug addicts — and, consequently, drug thieves, especially from the businesses of the title — who wash up in Portland's then-gritty Pearl District. A death among their own spooks the leader of the pack into trying to clean up, and an encounter with a sepulchral junkie priest does its part to convince him further. Or maybe we should call him a Junkie priest, portrayed as he is by a controversial cameo from writer William S. Burroughs. "I'm going back to the old days," Burroughs says of his role early in the above documentary on the making of Drugstore Cowboy. "The old days when they used to give people morphine in jail. The old days before the methadone programs."
Released: Oct 26, 1999
Runtime: 28 minutes
Genre: Documentary
Stars: William S. Burroughs, Gus Van Sant, Matt Dillon
Crew: Carl Vandervoort (Editor), Bruce McKay (Sound Recordist), Michael Gillis (Post Production Supervisor), Pat Baum (Sound Recordist), Laurie Parker (Producer), Cary Brokaw (Executive Producer)