Thank you! Don't forget to confirm subscription in your email.
A talented New York bartender takes a job at a bar in Jamaica and falls in love.
[Last Barman poem] Brian: I am the last barman poet / I see America drinking the fabulous cocktails I make / Americans getting stinky on something I stir or shake / The sex on the beach / The schnapps made from peach / The velvet hammer / The Alabama slammer. / I make things with juice and froth / The pink squirrel / The three-toed sloth. / I make drinks so sweet and snazzy / The iced tea / The kamakazi / The orgasm / The death spasm / The Singapore sling / The dingaling. / America you've just been devoted to every flavor I got / But if you want to got loaded / Why don't you just order a shot? / Bar is open.
Doug: The luck is gone / the brain is shot / but the liquor we still got.
Doug: You see, there are two kinds of people in this world: the workers and the hustlers. The hustlers never work and the workers never hustle...
Brian: Coughlin's law: never show surprise, never lose your cool.
Doug: [in his suicide note to Brian] My dearest Brian, A guy like me looks in the mirror, he either grins, or he starts to fade away. And I haven't seen anything to grin about in a long time. This may not be the most graceful exit, but I know when the bottle's empty. The only thing I'm really going to miss is the conversations we had. At least I get the last word, even if I had to mail it in. Coughlin's Law: Bury the dead. They stink up the joint. As for the rest of Coughlin's Laws, ignore them. The guy was always full of shit. [chuckles bitterly] Doug: But I guess you knew that already.
[Flanagan's advice to his unborn child: ] Brian: If Jordan gives birth to a fine Irish son / There will be Cocktails and Dreams for him one day to run / A business that will yield the financial windfall / To be franchised in every suburban shopping mall. / If a daughter arrives to bless our clan / I guess the shit will finally hit the fan / But this I shall promise thee / I'll never let her marry a guy like me. / Still if our child is the naughtiest of girls or the wildest of young men / I swear I'll be the best dad I can / And never ever get spooked again.
Doug: Mighty Casey has struck out. Brian: The game's not over yet. It wouldn't be any fun if they fell over with their legs in the air, would it?
Uncle Pat: [On how to succeed in business] You outwork, outthink, outscheme and outmanuever. You make no friends. You trust nobody. And you make damn sure you're the smartest guy in the room whenever the subject of money comes up.
Doug: Coughlin's Law: anything else is always something better.
Brian: Listen, I'm sorry I called you a bitch. Eleanor: Why? I am a bitch.
Brian: Days get shorter and shorter, nights longer and longer, before you know it, your life is just one long night with a few comatose daylight hours.
Bonnie: Please, I don't want to end it this way. Brian: Jesus, everything ends badly, otherwise it wouldn't end.
[last lines] Jordan: Bet I can still spook you. Brian: No way. [she whispers in his ear] Brian: Twins? Twins? [to everyone] Brian: Twins! Drinks are on the house! Uncle Pat: No! No! Brian: The bar is open!
Uncle Pat: Most things in life, good and bad, just kinda' happen to ya'.
Doug: Coughlin's Law: bury the dead, they stink up the place.
Doug: I don't care how liberated this world becomes - a man will always be judged by the amount of alcohol he can consume - and a woman will be impressed, whether she likes it or not.
Brian: I'm looking for the Manager. Doug: What's the problem? Did you find a hair in your quiche? Brian: No, I'm looking for a job. Doug: Ah, you'd like to put a hair in somebody else's quiche.
Doug: [Introducing himself] Douglas Coughlin, Logical Negativist. Flourished in the last part of the 20th Century. Propounded a set of laws the world generally ignores, to its detriment.
Brian: Not a goddamned thing any one of those professors says makes a difference on the street. Doug: If you know that, you're ready to graduate.
Doug: Couglin's diet: cocktails and dreams.
Brian: You're offering me a job? Doug: Uh huh. Brian: The waitresses hate me! Doug: You wait till you've given them crabs. Then you'll really know hatred.
Brian: [telling Bonnie he's moving out of her place] I left a can of Spam in your refrigerator... I hope your Brewers Yeast doesn't take it personally.
Doug: When you see the color of their panties, you know you've got talent. Stick with me son and I'll make you a star.
Doug: Coughlin's law: never tell tales about a woman, she'll hear you no matter how far away she is.
Brian: Should we let it breathe? Doug: It hasn't breathed for fifty years, it's dead. Let's just drink it.
Brian: I'm willing to start at the bottom. Job Interviewer: You're aiming too high.
[Jordan is drawing a picture of Brian] Brian: So this is your profession. Jordan: More like my... obsession. Brian: To pay the rent? Jordan: Someday it will.
[Jordan has returned to her father's Park Avenue penthouse to find Brian arguing with him] Brian: I think there's a chance for us. Jordan: Brian, there is no "us." There's too many things about "us" that don't work. Brian: What about the baby? A kid needs a father. Jordan: Not one who's not going to be around in a year? Mr. Mooney: Yeah, with your lifestyle, what kind of a father would you... Jordan: Dad!
Doug: However, falling down the stairs is allowed!
Bonnie: I've been thinking about you all day. Brian: Really? A plane ride home will cure that.
Brian: [looking at Jordan's painting] Is this our waterfall? Jordan: No. Brian: It's terrific. Jordan: Yeah, it's all right. The name's Mooney, not Monet.
Brian: I'll stick with the brew. Doug: Beer is for breakfast around here, drink or be gone.
Bonnie: Excuse me, do I have "fuck me" written on my forehead?
[first lines] Brian: Come on, put it to the floor! Come on! Let's go!