There was more complaining than I could remember at the 2006 edition of
the Sundance Film Festival. Along with a general malaise, audiences had
a pretty bad attitude about the films this year. And to be honest,
there wasn't that much stuff that rocked this writer's world. But here
are a few things that did.
Waking up at 7:00 in the morning to get to an 8:30 screening on the
first day of the festival is becoming a tradition for me. This year it
was for the Documentary Shorts program, the highlight of the bunch
being the shortest film in the collection (five minutes): Undressing My Mother
by Ken Wardrop. The film is a beautiful and loving portrait of the
filmmaker's mother and features vibrant nude photography coupled with
an aging woman's voiceover that is both tender and poignant.
Then there was Thin,
the new doc directed by prominent youth culture photographer Lauren
Greenfield and produced by RJ Cutler, Amanda Micheli and Ted Skillman.
One in seven young American women has an eating disorder. Thin
goes inside a Florida rehabilitation center to reveal the lives and
psychoses of several young women with eating disorders. The film is
compelling, as the viewer truly wants these women to get well and be
healthy again. According to the press notes, 10 to 14 percent of people
with anorexia will die from the illness; watching the film makes me
think that's a low number. Thin is an incredibly bleak and unnerving film, but at the same time it shows compassion for these struggling women.
Nathanial Hornblower (aka Adam Yauch, aka MCA--one of the threesome that
makes up the Beastie Boys) is at it again with the new Beastie Boys
concert film Awesome; I Fuckin' Shot That! And the film is
awesome. The Beastie Boys handed out video cameras to 50 fans to shoot
the entire concert, at New York City 's Madison Square Garden. The old
adage "Whatever you do, just keep shooting" is put into play, and the
energetic concert is captured from 50 perspectives.
The film starts with the "shooters" getting their pep talk before going
to their assigned seats that are spread out all across the Garden.
Everyone is pumped. Seeing the concert through the eyes of the fans is
exhilarating and at times both funny and even a little over the topis
it cool to keep shooting when you take a bathroom break, buy a beer or
try to get backstage access? But it's this stuff that breaks up the
concert, adds character and let's the "shooters" show a little extra
creativity. The Beastie Boys perform songs that span their 20-year
career. The film uses great effects that make viewers feel as if they
are there, including shots with all 50 cameras going at once. And with
the sound turned up and the base thumpin', it's an intense musical and
visual treat.
What's a film festival without a couple of panels? "Podcasting,
Vlogging & the Freedom of Speech" panelists included Susan Buice of
the indie film Four Eyed Monsters,
explicit podcaster Soccergirl and Mika Salmi of Atom Films; it was
moderated by Jason Calacanis, CEO of Weblogs, Inc. The most interesting
thing conveyed at the panel was the claim that people are ready for
downloads like never before--the content is there, iPod and other media
players bring in portability and more and more people have broadband.
Plus, this new media is getting easier and easier to use, allowing
independent artists to keep creating, promoting and selling their own
independent media.
This is stuff we have heard before. But considering that the Four Eyed Monsters
crew created its own audience of over 50,000 viewers per episode using
podcasts and MySpace.com, this is pretty phenomenal and certainly
something that can be deployed by independent nonfiction and fiction
filmmakers everywhere.
When I read in the festival program that there was a documentary about
global warming starring former future president of the United States,
Al Gore, I figured An Inconvenient Truth
(Laurie David, Lawrence Bender, Scott Burns, prods.) was the movie for
me. And if you have to make a movie that features Gore delivering a
lecture, then the film couldn't have been made more gracefully and
powerfully than this. Filmmaker Davis Guggenheim's foray into the world
of global warming is stunning. It starts out simply enough, with Gore's
voice warming the audience in an ingeniously directed voiceover. The
film's not an easy sell, but when you get into it, it's actually quite
moving and even more anger-inducing than sister Sundance doc Who Killed the Electric Car? (Chris Paine, dir.; Jessie Deeter, prod.). The only thing I regret is seeing An Inconvenient Truth at the press screening; at the public screenings Gore was on hand for the Q&A sessions.
Saving the best for last, I hit a midnight movie the night before my
flight home. I told myself, "No more midnight movies," but I'm glad I
made the exception for the winner of the World Cinema Jury Prize in
Documentary, In the Pit
by Juan Carlos Rulfo. The documentary tells the story of a second level
being built atop of an already existing freeway in Mexico. It is
beautifully shot on Super-16, 35mm and DV and includes time-lapse
photography and music that is completely composed of 36 sampled
construction sounds by Leo Heiblum. When it is strung together through
the film, it sings of hope, movement and change.
On the way out of the theater I noticed the poster for In the Pit with
the caption, "The pit is the pre-text; what we encounter is life." This
could be said about a lot of films--and certainly about attending film
festivals and seeing films come to life on the big screen in front of
audiences. I only wish the audiences were a little more excited about
it this time around.
Sarah Jo Marks is a contributing editor to Documentary magazine; she can be reached at www.atriskfilms.com.