Anthony Bourdain's life is reexamined in new movie trailer - Los Angeles Times
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New trailer for Anthony Bourdain film reminds his stardom ‘was almost never about food’

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In a trailer out Thursday for “Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain,” the viewer sees a man whose life was simultaneously all about food and not about food at all.

The story of celebrity chef-turned-travel documentarian Bourdain, who died by suicide in 2018 at 61, is billed as “an intimate, behind-the-scenes look at how an anonymous chef became a world-renowned cultural icon.”

Directed by Oscar-winning filmmaker Morgan Neville, who helmed films including “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?,” “Roadrunner” reminds us of a Bourdain whose hair had not yet grayed, a chef who wrote “Kitchen Confidential.”

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The documentary captures Bourdain as he transitioned into a different role in which he wandered the world in shows like “No Reservations” and “Parts Unknown,” seeking tastes, thrills and revelations about life.

Bourdain’s voice in the trailer offers a hint of the tragedy to come: “You’re probably going to find out about it anyway, so here’s a little preemptive truth-telling,” he says. “There’s no happy ending.”

“It was almost never about food. It was about Tony learning how to be a better person,” Momofuku restaurant group founder David Chang says in the trailer.

Chang, who revealed his bipolar I diagnosis last year in his memoir, “Eat a Peach,” has previously expressed regret over Bourdain’s death. (“It wasn’t supposed to happen to him,” Chang told People last summer. “That was supposed to happen to me. He was supposed to hold it together for all of us.”)

We see Bourdain trudging through snow as far as the eye can see, jumping off a tropical cliff, digging his toes into the never-ending sand of the Sahara Desert.

Globe-trotting chef, author and TV host Anthony Bourdain was worth $1.2 million when he died last month and left most of the estate to his 11-year-old daughter, according to court papers filed this week in New York.

July 7, 2018

Then there are the other voices.

“Reality was never going to live up to exactly how he pictured it.”

“He was always rushing to get into the scene, rushing to get out of the scene, to go somewhere next even if he had nowhere to go.”

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“He was definitely searching for something.”

And finally, again from Bourdain: “You might ask, how is this food-related? F— if I know.”

“Roadrunner” hits theaters July 16.

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