Bagdad Cafe is a 1987 English-language West German film directed by Percy Adlon. It is a comedy-drama set in a remote truck stop and motel in the Mojave Desert in the US state of California. Loosely based on Carson McCullers' novella The Ballad of the Sad Café, the film centers on two women who have recently separated from their husbands, and the blossoming friendship that ensues. It runs 95 minutes in the U.S. and 108 minutes in the German version.
Plot
German tourists Jasmin Münchgstettner from Rosenheim and her husband fight while driving across the desert. She storms out of the car and makes her way to the isolated truck stop, which is run by the tough-as-nails and short-tempered Brenda, whose own husband, after an argument out front, is soon to leave as well. Jasmin takes a room at the adjacent motel. Initially suspicious of the foreigner, Brenda eventually befriends Jasmin and allows her to work at the cafe. The cafe is visited by an assortment of colorful characters, including a strange ex-Hollywood set-painter and a glamorous tattoo artist. Brenda's son plays J. S. Bach preludes on the piano. With an ability to quietly empathize with everyone she meets at the cafe, helped by a passion for cleaning and performing magic tricks, Jasmin gradually transforms the cafe and all the people in it.
Cast
Marianne Sägebrecht as Jasmin Münchgstettner
CCH Pounder as Brenda
Jack Palance as Rudi Cox
Christine Kaufmann as Debby
Monica Calhoun as Phyllis
Darron Flagg as Salomo
George Aguilar as Cahuenga
G. Smokey Campbell as Sal
Hans Stadlbauer as Herr Münchgstettner
Alan S. Craig as Eric
Apesanahkwat as Sheriff Arnie
Reception
The film had positive reviews. It holds an 89% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 19 reviews, with a weighted average of 6.79/10. The film was successful at the box office, with a US gross of $3.59 million.
In 1990 the film was re-created as a television series starring James Gammon, Whoopi Goldberg, Cleavon Little, and Jean Stapleton, with Stapleton as the abandoned tourist, and Goldberg as the restaurant operator. In the TV version the tourist was no longer from Germany. The series was shot in the conventional sitcom format, before a studio audience. The show did not attract a sizable audience and it was cancelled after two seasons.
Location
The setting, Bagdad, California, is a former town on U.S. Route 66. After being bypassed by Interstate 40 in 1973, it was abandoned and eventually razed. While the town had a "Bagdad Cafe", the film was shot at the then Sidewinder Cafe in Newberry Springs, west of the site of Bagdad. The cafe has become something of a tourist destination; to capitalize on the movie, it changed its name to Bagdad Cafe. A small noticeboard on the cafe wall features snapshots of the film's cast and crew.
Soundtrack
The soundtrack features the song "Calling You", by Jevetta Steele, and has a track in which the director narrates the story, including the film's missing scenes. The principal piano pieces, performed by Darron Flagg, are preludes from Book I of Bach'sThe Well-Tempered Clavier: the C major, no. 1, BWV 845; the C major, BWV 846, no. 2; and the D major, no. 5, BWV 850.