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    <title>The Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman's Recent Activity - Spout</title>
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      <title>Film:The Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Polymath_or_the_Life_and_Opinions_of_Samuel_R_Delany_Gentleman/326162/default.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<table width='100%' style='font:10px/10px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;'><tr><td><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s326162.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' /></td>
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<strong>Title:</strong> The Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman<br/>
<strong>Year:</strong> 2007<br/>
<strong>Director:</strong> Fred Barney Taylor<br/>
<strong>Plot:</strong> Highly regarded for such science fiction tomes as Nova, Hogg and The Einstein Intersection, African American author and intellectual Samuel Delany launched his career at the tender age of 20, publishing no less than nine novels from 1962 to 1968, as well as a plethora of short stories; in the process, Delany became a critical favorite and garnered a devoted (and much-deserved) cult following. With his experimental documentary The Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman, filmmaker Fred Barney Taylor charts the eccentric personal side of iconoclast Delany's life, with a marked emphasis on the author's homoerotic adventures. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide<br/>
<strong>Times Tagged:</strong> 5<br/>
<strong>Number of Lists:</strong> 2<br/>
<strong>Number of blog posts:</strong> 4<br/>
<strong>SpoutRating:</strong> 5<br/>
</td></tr></table>]]></description><pubDate>Fri, 13 Jul 2007 20:00:53 GMT</pubDate><spout:Title>The Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman</spout:Title><spout:Year>2007</spout:Year><spout:Director>Fred Barney Taylor</spout:Director><spout:Plot>Highly regarded for such science fiction tomes as Nova, Hogg and The Einstein Intersection, African American author and intellectual Samuel Delany launched his career at the tender age of 20, publishing no less than nine novels from 1962 to 1968, as well as a plethora of short stories; in the process, Delany became a critical favorite and garnered a devoted (and much-deserved) cult following. With his experimental documentary The Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman, filmmaker Fred Barney Taylor charts the eccentric personal side of iconoclast Delany's life, with a marked emphasis on the author's homoerotic adventures. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide</spout:Plot><spout:TimesTagged>5</spout:TimesTagged><spout:taglevel>Slightly Tagged (1-5)</spout:taglevel><spout:Numberoflists>2</spout:Numberoflists><spout:NumberOfBlogPosts>4</spout:NumberOfBlogPosts><spout:SpoutRating>5</spout:SpoutRating><spout:FilmCoverURL>http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s326162.jpg</spout:FilmCoverURL><spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL>http://www.spout.com/films/The_Polymath_or_the_Life_and_Opinions_of_Samuel_R_Delany_Gentleman/326162/default.aspx</spout:SpoutFilmDetailURL><spout:type>Film</spout:type></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Post: With a Friend Like This...</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/blogs/thereeler/archive/2007/5/8/8412.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s326162.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/11756/default.aspx'>TheReeler</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/blogs/thereeler/default.aspx'>The Reeler on Spout</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 5/8/2007 12:50:00 PM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> Friends forever: Daniel Auteuil and Julie Gayet in My Best Friend   By Eric Kohn  So much of the festival environment relies on finding new talent that the presence of established artists practically seems like an afterthought. The tenuous relationship between career success and festival recognition doesn&rsquo;t apply to filmmakers whose name alone attracts a crowd. This year, Tribeca held a spot for Patrice Leconte, one of the finest contemporary French filmmakers, for his sizably budgeted comedy My Best Friend. The movie arrived at the festival with a distribution deal through IFC Films in place (it hits theaters July 13), meaning that its inclusion in the festival primarily serves to guarantee that some quality offerings that only a veteran can provide.    But what&rsquo;s in a name? Not everything, unfortunately. I&rsquo;ve admired Leconte&rsquo;s inquisitive character studies for years; his magnificent reworking of The Prince and the Pauper in 2002&rsquo;s The Man on the Train transcended the simple concept of a switcheroo to arrive at a simultaneously touching and engaging thriller; Intimate Strangers magnificently interrogated the relationship between a therapist and his patient without laying down too much psychobabble. My Best Friend shows Leconte&rsquo;s fondness for personalities wrapped up in quixotic conflicts, but the premise is too incredulous even by his own standards: A heartless art dealer (Daniel Auteuil) learns from his colleagues that he has no friends (business partners don&rsquo;t count). Fiercely intent on proving them wrong, he sets out to find a perfect candidate to fill in the blank. He eventually settles on an affable taxi driver (Dany Boon), whom he attempts to cajole into friendship. Naturally, the poor guy finds out, they have a few arguments, and a major reconciliation scene takes place on a French version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire? Really.    I get the sense that Leconte got too ambitious with the material. Rather than trusting the round-up highly amusing personalities, he allows them to fall into highly incredulous situations that diminish the potential for believable humor and the possibility that the movie contains any real message other than &ldquo;friends are good.&rdquo; For a more intricate study of character relationships, check out Fiestapatria, a sensationally moving drama centered on family dynamics across generations in Chile. Director Luis Vera shoots his story on with the tried-and-true shaky cam aesthetic, recalling successful Dogme entries like The Celebration, where the viewer gets treated to clandestine secrets that stretch across the secretive boundaries of parents and children. In this case, a teenager struggles to uncover her father&rsquo;s dark past from the bloody time of the Pinochean dictatorship, culminating in a shocking confrontation more chilling than any typical squabbling over curfew. Fiestapatria is about family, but it&rsquo;s also about mortality.    Death offers easy access for creating drama, but it doesn&rsquo;t ensure quality in the execution. Nanking, a documentary about the bloody 1937-1938 Japanese occupation of China&rsquo;s formerly flourishing establishment, certainly hits a nerve: Women were raped and families were torn apart before a resident Nazi and a few stray American missionaries were able to kickstart a means of restoring order. The photos and brief film clips included in Nanking aren&rsquo;t for the squeamish, but the strange technique that directors Bill Guttentag, Dan Sturman and Elisabeth Bentley use for their storytelling is questionably disingenuous. They hired several actors (including Woody Harrelson) to sit on a stage and read from letters written by the people who were in China and observing the massacres at the time. It&rsquo;s an earnest attempt to let the realism levitate to a theatrical plane, but there&rsquo;s something troubling about watching the dude from Cheers when you&rsquo;re trying to take the images seriously.    A more conventional -- and satisfying -- approach to the study of death and disorder can be found in Lillie and Leander: A Legacy of Violence. Starting with the shocking legend of a black man hanged in the late 1800s for supposedly slitting the throat of a woman in a small American town. Years later, the woman&rsquo;s great-great niece set out to make a documentary of the event, quickly discovering that it was only a small part of a largely horrifying story. That lynching set off a slew of violent, murderous attacks against the local African-American population, turning the forest into a virtual burial ground. Jeffrey Morgan, the movie&rsquo;s director, stumbled upon this story as it was developing and caught the process of discovering human remains as it took place. Although the pace occasionally lags, Lillie and Leander gives an essential portrait of the role the past plays in understanding the present.    With such unsettling material, it&rsquo;s hard to imagine switching gears for a tamer documentary, but at least the festival provides some variety. Music Inn tells the story of an annual gathering of legendary jazz musicians in Lennox, Massachusetts. What began as a few impressive jam sessions eventually developed into a functional hotel, school and festival host. Music junkies will find the role of the Music Inn in the history of America&rsquo;s most diverse music genre to be instantly compelling; the inn essentially functioned as an artists&rsquo; haven, which makes its eventual fate as a collection of condominiums especially revealing.   In the East Village, another area slowly vanishing in the face of skyrocketing real estate, Samuel R. Delany lives a messy writer&rsquo;s life. The remarkably talented prose composer and sci-fi scribe, who sports a Ginsbergian mustache and rambles enthusiastically about his &#39;60s sexual exploits, serves as the subject for Fred Barney Taylor&rsquo;s enlightening The Polymath or, The Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman. Following Delany from book readings to writer conferences and into the claustrophobic confines of his home, Taylor lets his subject guide the piece, and the result is all across the board, and consistently fascinating. Delany is a contradictory figure, at once self-depricating and self-absorbed. Striding along a dense Manhattan street, he claims to be a &ldquo;boring, dull, black faggot.&rdquo; As if.          Discuss these and other Tribeca titles at Spout:  My Best Friend Fiestapatria    Nanking    Lillie and Leander: A Legacy of Violence    Music Inn The Polymath or, The Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman   Syndicated Feed From:The Reeler<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 08 May 2007 16:50:00 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>TheReeler</spout:postby><spout:postto>The Reeler on Spout</spout:postto><spout:postdate>5/8/2007 12:50:00 PM</spout:postdate><spout:body>Friends forever: Daniel Auteuil and Julie Gayet in My Best Friend   By Eric Kohn  So much of the festival environment relies on finding new talent that the presence of established artists practically seems like an afterthought. The tenuous relationship between career success and festival recognition doesn&amp;rsquo;t apply to filmmakers whose name alone attracts a crowd. This year, Tribeca held a spot for Patrice Leconte, one of the finest contemporary French filmmakers, for his sizably budgeted comedy My Best Friend. The movie arrived at the festival with a distribution deal through IFC Films in place (it hits theaters July 13), meaning that its inclusion in the festival primarily serves to guarantee that some quality offerings that only a veteran can provide.    But what&amp;rsquo;s in a name? Not everything, unfortunately. I&amp;rsquo;ve admired Leconte&amp;rsquo;s inquisitive character studies for years; his magnificent reworking of The Prince and the Pauper in 2002&amp;rsquo;s The Man on the Train transcended the simple concept of a switcheroo to arrive at a simultaneously touching and engaging thriller; Intimate Strangers magnificently interrogated the relationship between a therapist and his patient without laying down too much psychobabble. My Best Friend shows Leconte&amp;rsquo;s fondness for personalities wrapped up in quixotic conflicts, but the premise is too incredulous even by his own standards: A heartless art dealer (Daniel Auteuil) learns from his colleagues that he has no friends (business partners don&amp;rsquo;t count). Fiercely intent on proving them wrong, he sets out to find a perfect candidate to fill in the blank. He eventually settles on an affable taxi driver (Dany Boon), whom he attempts to cajole into friendship. Naturally, the poor guy finds out, they have a few arguments, and a major reconciliation scene takes place on a French version of Who Wants to be a Millionaire? Really.    I get the sense that Leconte got too ambitious with the material. Rather than trusting the round-up highly amusing personalities, he allows them to fall into highly incredulous situations that diminish the potential for believable humor and the possibility that the movie contains any real message other than &amp;ldquo;friends are good.&amp;rdquo; For a more intricate study of character relationships, check out Fiestapatria, a sensationally moving drama centered on family dynamics across generations in Chile. Director Luis Vera shoots his story on with the tried-and-true shaky cam aesthetic, recalling successful Dogme entries like The Celebration, where the viewer gets treated to clandestine secrets that stretch across the secretive boundaries of parents and children. In this case, a teenager struggles to uncover her father&amp;rsquo;s dark past from the bloody time of the Pinochean dictatorship, culminating in a shocking confrontation more chilling than any typical squabbling over curfew. Fiestapatria is about family, but it&amp;rsquo;s also about mortality.    Death offers easy access for creating drama, but it doesn&amp;rsquo;t ensure quality in the execution. Nanking, a documentary about the bloody 1937-1938 Japanese occupation of China&amp;rsquo;s formerly flourishing establishment, certainly hits a nerve: Women were raped and families were torn apart before a resident Nazi and a few stray American missionaries were able to kickstart a means of restoring order. The photos and brief film clips included in Nanking aren&amp;rsquo;t for the squeamish, but the strange technique that directors Bill Guttentag, Dan Sturman and Elisabeth Bentley use for their storytelling is questionably disingenuous. They hired several actors (including Woody Harrelson) to sit on a stage and read from letters written by the people who were in China and observing the massacres at the time. It&amp;rsquo;s an earnest attempt to let the realism levitate to a theatrical plane, but there&amp;rsquo;s something troubling about watching the dude from Cheers when you&amp;rsquo;re trying to take the images seriously.    A more conventional -- and satisfying -- approach to the study of death and disorder can be found in Lillie and Leander: A Legacy of Violence. Starting with the shocking legend of a black man hanged in the late 1800s for supposedly slitting the throat of a woman in a small American town. Years later, the woman&amp;rsquo;s great-great niece set out to make a documentary of the event, quickly discovering that it was only a small part of a largely horrifying story. That lynching set off a slew of violent, murderous attacks against the local African-American population, turning the forest into a virtual burial ground. Jeffrey Morgan, the movie&amp;rsquo;s director, stumbled upon this story as it was developing and caught the process of discovering human remains as it took place. Although the pace occasionally lags, Lillie and Leander gives an essential portrait of the role the past plays in understanding the present.    With such unsettling material, it&amp;rsquo;s hard to imagine switching gears for a tamer documentary, but at least the festival provides some variety. Music Inn tells the story of an annual gathering of legendary jazz musicians in Lennox, Massachusetts. What began as a few impressive jam sessions eventually developed into a functional hotel, school and festival host. Music junkies will find the role of the Music Inn in the history of America&amp;rsquo;s most diverse music genre to be instantly compelling; the inn essentially functioned as an artists&amp;rsquo; haven, which makes its eventual fate as a collection of condominiums especially revealing.   In the East Village, another area slowly vanishing in the face of skyrocketing real estate, Samuel R. Delany lives a messy writer&amp;rsquo;s life. The remarkably talented prose composer and sci-fi scribe, who sports a Ginsbergian mustache and rambles enthusiastically about his &amp;#39;60s sexual exploits, serves as the subject for Fred Barney Taylor&amp;rsquo;s enlightening The Polymath or, The Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman. Following Delany from book readings to writer conferences and into the claustrophobic confines of his home, Taylor lets his subject guide the piece, and the result is all across the board, and consistently fascinating. Delany is a contradictory figure, at once self-depricating and self-absorbed. Striding along a dense Manhattan street, he claims to be a &amp;ldquo;boring, dull, black faggot.&amp;rdquo; As if.          Discuss these and other Tribeca titles at Spout:  My Best Friend Fiestapatria    Nanking    Lillie and Leander: A Legacy of Violence    Music Inn The Polymath or, The Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman   Syndicated Feed From:The Reeler</spout:body></item>
    <item>
      <title>Spout Post: Carolla Hammers it Home</title>
      <link>http://www.spout.com/blogs/thereeler/archive/2007/5/1/7899.aspx</link><description><![CDATA[<div><img align='left' src='http://www.spout.com/ProductImages/s326162.jpg' hspace='10' style='height:80px;' />
<strong>Post By:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/members/11756/default.aspx'>TheReeler</a><br/>
<strong>Post To:</strong> <a href='http://www.spout.com/blogs/thereeler/default.aspx'>The Reeler on Spout</a><br/>
<strong>Post Date:</strong> 5/1/2007 7:55:27 AM<br/>
<strong>Body:</strong> Adam Carolla, bound for glory in The Hammer

By Vadim Rizov

Lord knows I never imagined Adam Carolla's first vehicle as a leading man would be one of Tribeca's highlights, but so it goes. The success of Adam Sandler and the subsequent Frat Pack has made film safe for unapologetically guy-oriented comedies again, and Carolla -- the affably loutish co-host of Loveline and The Man Show -- runs well with the trend he (kind of) kick-started. The Hammer is the story of an affable low-class failure ("middle-class is one of the nicest things I've ever been called," he notes) who gets an unlikely second chance through sports. 

Nothing unusual (I swear I didn't intentionally try to make it sound like Rocky), but The Hammer is executed with slightly more savoir-faire than could've been guessed, and intellectually it's years ahead of The Man Show. Carolla apparently no longer takes self-conscious pride in being as stereotypically guy-ish as possible. Instead, he reconfigures his persona slightly to emphasize what it's like to not just be a guy, but a poor guy. There's much talk in the first half-hour of Carolla's frustration at his low-pay construction work, and he has a rule for himself that states no marriage can come before landing a job with health care. It's an angle that feels way less tacked-on than, say, HBO's overrated Lucky Louie.

The script is formatted to toggle back and forth between plot sequences and little breaks in which Carolla can riff at will. In between, the inevitable romantic subplot finds Carolla winning his lady over by building a deck for her backyard. Wooing through construction skills is a new one, but why not? Lowbrow laughs abound, even as the script slowly ditches the surprising verisimilitude of the opening and goes for a straight fantasy of redemption. The best lines are the ones that aim lowest, like the construction foreman who growls at a Nicaraguan worker "No habla retardo, Speedy Gonzales. You're lazy even for a Mexican." The worker replies: "I'm from Nicaragua." Foreman: "Same difference." Who would've ever guessed that Carolla and Larry Clark (who pulls the same shit in Wassup Rockers?) were so close at heart.Two of verite documentaries' hottest topics -- ghetto and gay life -- make for surprisingly apt bedfellows in Abigail Child's well-assembled video documentary On the Downlow. Ray, age 18, starts things off by announcing "I'm a thug" and giving a litany of crimes he's been on the giving and receiving end of -- shooting and jumping others come up high -- before unexpectedly veering off into his sex life. For African-American thug men (no lesbians here), it seems, being gay largely means being "on the downlow" -- concealing one's sexuality from family and friends, creating an alternate community of similarly clandestine men. Not all identify in the same straightforward manner -- some, like Kerwin, are nominally bisexual but only for women, as he says, who are "head-turners." Then there's the most troubled of the bunch, Antonio, who announces: "Guys I've been with are from prison. I don't know why I'm attracted to guys doing life."

Child moves from person to person, creating an ad-hoc portrait of Cleveland's underground black gay scene and hitting all the appropriate topics without rushing: coming out to one's parents; black homophobia; the persisting rumor that only gay people spread AIDS. Aside from some downright bizarre errors in the sound (elementary things that any freshman year film student could've fixed on ProTools in an hour), this is exactly the kind of well-assembled, meat-and-potatoes doc that festivals like SXSW thrive on: Child conducts revealing interviews with articulate subjects and illustrates with the relevant footage. The results still belong more on TV than in an $18-per-ticket festival, but there's no denying the interest of the subject or skill of execution: This is harder to assemble than it looks.

Still, if you're dead-set on value for money, On The Downlow is billed with another hour-long video doc as part of the "Coming Out" program. All the two films have in common are gay black men, but The Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman is the inverse image in a lot of ways. The title's no joke: Delany is a sci-fi writer, academic theorist, sexual raconteur and generally the wordiest bastard on the planet this side of David Foster Wallace. Despite being tagged as "experimental" on the Tribeca website, all that really happens is that Delany talks for a full hour while director Fred Barney Taylor occasionally layers slowed-down images on top of each other or generally tries to do anything that'll distract from the fact that you're watching a what is at heart radio documentary. No denying that Delany is a man who knows how to tell a story and knows more than you ever will, lecturing with equal authority on Paul Robeson's college days or on how gay men used to hook up in movie theaters. Delany should know -- the initially fantastic claim that he's slept with 50,000+ people becomes quite understandable when he lays out his pre-AIDS routine. The whole thing eventually curdles into the equivalent of a claustrophobic party conversation with someone who at first fascinates and then just keeps going, cornering you and not letting you go. What you're hearing is interesting, but all you really want is a drink.

First there was Pixelvision -- the '90s work of filmmakers such as Michael Almereyda or Sadie Benning who utilized the graininess of a toy Fisher-Price camera to create a new aesthetic. Now, if you talk to the right academic or festival programmer, cell-phone cinema might be the next big thing. Cyrus Frisch's  Why didn't anybody tell me it would be this bad in Afghanistan definitely isn't the movie that'll make this trend actually happen if it ever does, but it's an interesting enough example of how this could be a cool way to pump some life into the avant-garde. The festival catalog explicates the movie better than I could by watching it (a soldier with traumatic flashbacks stays in Afghanistan), but whatever the meaning is seems to get lost –- which seems to be the whole point anyway.

Cell-phone movies are, unsurprisingly, frequently grainy to point of unintelligibility, and the film becomes a study in abstract textures as much as any kind of coherent narrative framework. One particularly interesting sequence has Frisch pacing around a grocery store, trying to spy on a violent confrontation between customer and guards: As he circles around, trying to be inconspicuous, the floor tiles he inadvertently captures keep changing in texture and depth, a constant re-arrangement of pixels that deranges the original image. Afghanistan isn’t nearly this interesting on a regular basis, and one gets the feeling that most of its boldest visual coups are happy accidents. Still, the adventurous should find plenty here to bolster the case for cell phones as the next big way to create previously undreamed-of visual textures.

João Moreira Salles’s Santiago is a doc that rises above others solely by virtue of the festival competition. Salles is the brother of the much better-known Walter Salles (The Motorcycle Diaries, Central Station), but his formal chops are in much better working condition. Ostensibly a re-consideration of footage for a documentary project about the retired family butler –- shot in 1992, finally beaten into a workable shape now -– what Santiago is really about is the pleasures of rigorous black-and-white framing. Even projected in HD, Santiago has to be one of the best-looking movies in competition. It’s a good thing too, because the titular Santiago is equal parts fascinating curiosity and tiresome, self-consciously quirky. Now retired, the butler spends all his time finishing up his notes –- some 30,000 pages’ worth of copied information about seemingly every dynasty under the sun, with some obsessive list-making thrown in for good measure. Santiago’s grand project is nothing less than keeping perpetually in memory history’s grand eccentrics, both major and minor. At 80, the man is shockingly vigorous in conversation, yet he also seems to be trying too hard to be a “character” (like when he insists that Salles film the “dance of his hands,” a bunch of vague, swishy air-waving filmed in extreme close-up). Fortunately, there’s also Salles’ voiceover musings upon the film; only now, years after giving up on the original project, can he really confront the footage honestly, musing at his unintentional condescension to his subject and helpfully providing clips from Ozu to explain his framing decisions. The beauty of the images suggests an equal depth of content that simply never arrives, but Salles has the good grace to say as much in his narration. The result is equal parts technical exercise and character study -– half-successful on each front, but fun for anyone who enjoys collecting human oddities.

To reiterate my most frequent complaint about Tribeca’s documentaries: Hard as Nails is a perfectly respectable video documentary that belongs on HBO (where it will eventually air), not in an overpriced screening venue. The subject is Justin Fatica’s Hard As Nails Ministries –- an evangelical organization led by the unordained Catholic Fatica. The opening sequence suggests an awesome blend of The 700 Club and Jackass, as Fatica bellows at a group of students that Christ loves them. How much does he love them? To demonstrate, Fatica stands telling a girl repeatedly that he loves her while a flunky hits him really hard on the back with a wooden plank over and over again. The effect is supposedly to dramatize the pain Christ bore for humanity, but the kid seems to be putting a little too much smirking joy into his work, and as for the effect on the kids -– who knows.

If Hard As Nails is supposed to be some kind of expose, it’s impossible to tell; the documentary never tips its hand, and director David Holbrooke hasn’t done so publicly either. Fatica has a few more shock tactics in hand –- one of his regular features is to get a member of his team to stand up, yell that she’s fat repeatedly, and then inform everyone that it’s her inner beauty that matters -– but he’s really not that outrageous in the overall scheme of the evangelical world, and his sincerity is unquestionable. A weird combination of pumped-up thick-neck and endlessly zealous Christian, Fatica yells, cries and bullies his charges into conversion and commitment. (The Catholic diocese of Burlington ends up banning him from preaching in all Catholic churches in Vermont, and one school has to cancel half of his appearances after freaked-out kids start wailing for guidance counselors.) The results are certainly compelling, although the first 10 minutes are basically the entire film; Holbrooke shows us the ministry’s fundraising success but never manages to suggest any kind of progress made over the time spanned by the documentary. It’s fun, but you could stay home and watch TBN for free. 

Discuss these and other Tribeca titles at Spout:

The Hammer
On the Downlow 
The Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman   
 Why didn't anybody tell me it would be this bad in Afghanistan   
Santiago
Hard as Nails Syndicated Feed From:The Reeler<br/>
</div>]]></description><pubDate>Tue, 01 May 2007 11:55:27 GMT</pubDate><spout:postby>TheReeler</spout:postby><spout:postto>The Reeler on Spout</spout:postto><spout:postdate>5/1/2007 7:55:27 AM</spout:postdate><spout:body>Adam Carolla, bound for glory in The Hammer

By Vadim Rizov

Lord knows I never imagined Adam Carolla's first vehicle as a leading man would be one of Tribeca's highlights, but so it goes. The success of Adam Sandler and the subsequent Frat Pack has made film safe for unapologetically guy-oriented comedies again, and Carolla -- the affably loutish co-host of Loveline and The Man Show -- runs well with the trend he (kind of) kick-started. The Hammer is the story of an affable low-class failure ("middle-class is one of the nicest things I've ever been called," he notes) who gets an unlikely second chance through sports. 

Nothing unusual (I swear I didn't intentionally try to make it sound like Rocky), but The Hammer is executed with slightly more savoir-faire than could've been guessed, and intellectually it's years ahead of The Man Show. Carolla apparently no longer takes self-conscious pride in being as stereotypically guy-ish as possible. Instead, he reconfigures his persona slightly to emphasize what it's like to not just be a guy, but a poor guy. There's much talk in the first half-hour of Carolla's frustration at his low-pay construction work, and he has a rule for himself that states no marriage can come before landing a job with health care. It's an angle that feels way less tacked-on than, say, HBO's overrated Lucky Louie.

The script is formatted to toggle back and forth between plot sequences and little breaks in which Carolla can riff at will. In between, the inevitable romantic subplot finds Carolla winning his lady over by building a deck for her backyard. Wooing through construction skills is a new one, but why not? Lowbrow laughs abound, even as the script slowly ditches the surprising verisimilitude of the opening and goes for a straight fantasy of redemption. The best lines are the ones that aim lowest, like the construction foreman who growls at a Nicaraguan worker "No habla retardo, Speedy Gonzales. You're lazy even for a Mexican." The worker replies: "I'm from Nicaragua." Foreman: "Same difference." Who would've ever guessed that Carolla and Larry Clark (who pulls the same shit in Wassup Rockers?) were so close at heart.Two of verite documentaries' hottest topics -- ghetto and gay life -- make for surprisingly apt bedfellows in Abigail Child's well-assembled video documentary On the Downlow. Ray, age 18, starts things off by announcing "I'm a thug" and giving a litany of crimes he's been on the giving and receiving end of -- shooting and jumping others come up high -- before unexpectedly veering off into his sex life. For African-American thug men (no lesbians here), it seems, being gay largely means being "on the downlow" -- concealing one's sexuality from family and friends, creating an alternate community of similarly clandestine men. Not all identify in the same straightforward manner -- some, like Kerwin, are nominally bisexual but only for women, as he says, who are "head-turners." Then there's the most troubled of the bunch, Antonio, who announces: "Guys I've been with are from prison. I don't know why I'm attracted to guys doing life."

Child moves from person to person, creating an ad-hoc portrait of Cleveland's underground black gay scene and hitting all the appropriate topics without rushing: coming out to one's parents; black homophobia; the persisting rumor that only gay people spread AIDS. Aside from some downright bizarre errors in the sound (elementary things that any freshman year film student could've fixed on ProTools in an hour), this is exactly the kind of well-assembled, meat-and-potatoes doc that festivals like SXSW thrive on: Child conducts revealing interviews with articulate subjects and illustrates with the relevant footage. The results still belong more on TV than in an $18-per-ticket festival, but there's no denying the interest of the subject or skill of execution: This is harder to assemble than it looks.

Still, if you're dead-set on value for money, On The Downlow is billed with another hour-long video doc as part of the "Coming Out" program. All the two films have in common are gay black men, but The Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman is the inverse image in a lot of ways. The title's no joke: Delany is a sci-fi writer, academic theorist, sexual raconteur and generally the wordiest bastard on the planet this side of David Foster Wallace. Despite being tagged as "experimental" on the Tribeca website, all that really happens is that Delany talks for a full hour while director Fred Barney Taylor occasionally layers slowed-down images on top of each other or generally tries to do anything that'll distract from the fact that you're watching a what is at heart radio documentary. No denying that Delany is a man who knows how to tell a story and knows more than you ever will, lecturing with equal authority on Paul Robeson's college days or on how gay men used to hook up in movie theaters. Delany should know -- the initially fantastic claim that he's slept with 50,000+ people becomes quite understandable when he lays out his pre-AIDS routine. The whole thing eventually curdles into the equivalent of a claustrophobic party conversation with someone who at first fascinates and then just keeps going, cornering you and not letting you go. What you're hearing is interesting, but all you really want is a drink.

First there was Pixelvision -- the '90s work of filmmakers such as Michael Almereyda or Sadie Benning who utilized the graininess of a toy Fisher-Price camera to create a new aesthetic. Now, if you talk to the right academic or festival programmer, cell-phone cinema might be the next big thing. Cyrus Frisch's  Why didn't anybody tell me it would be this bad in Afghanistan definitely isn't the movie that'll make this trend actually happen if it ever does, but it's an interesting enough example of how this could be a cool way to pump some life into the avant-garde. The festival catalog explicates the movie better than I could by watching it (a soldier with traumatic flashbacks stays in Afghanistan), but whatever the meaning is seems to get lost –- which seems to be the whole point anyway.

Cell-phone movies are, unsurprisingly, frequently grainy to point of unintelligibility, and the film becomes a study in abstract textures as much as any kind of coherent narrative framework. One particularly interesting sequence has Frisch pacing around a grocery store, trying to spy on a violent confrontation between customer and guards: As he circles around, trying to be inconspicuous, the floor tiles he inadvertently captures keep changing in texture and depth, a constant re-arrangement of pixels that deranges the original image. Afghanistan isn’t nearly this interesting on a regular basis, and one gets the feeling that most of its boldest visual coups are happy accidents. Still, the adventurous should find plenty here to bolster the case for cell phones as the next big way to create previously undreamed-of visual textures.

João Moreira Salles’s Santiago is a doc that rises above others solely by virtue of the festival competition. Salles is the brother of the much better-known Walter Salles (The Motorcycle Diaries, Central Station), but his formal chops are in much better working condition. Ostensibly a re-consideration of footage for a documentary project about the retired family butler –- shot in 1992, finally beaten into a workable shape now -– what Santiago is really about is the pleasures of rigorous black-and-white framing. Even projected in HD, Santiago has to be one of the best-looking movies in competition. It’s a good thing too, because the titular Santiago is equal parts fascinating curiosity and tiresome, self-consciously quirky. Now retired, the butler spends all his time finishing up his notes –- some 30,000 pages’ worth of copied information about seemingly every dynasty under the sun, with some obsessive list-making thrown in for good measure. Santiago’s grand project is nothing less than keeping perpetually in memory history’s grand eccentrics, both major and minor. At 80, the man is shockingly vigorous in conversation, yet he also seems to be trying too hard to be a “character” (like when he insists that Salles film the “dance of his hands,” a bunch of vague, swishy air-waving filmed in extreme close-up). Fortunately, there’s also Salles’ voiceover musings upon the film; only now, years after giving up on the original project, can he really confront the footage honestly, musing at his unintentional condescension to his subject and helpfully providing clips from Ozu to explain his framing decisions. The beauty of the images suggests an equal depth of content that simply never arrives, but Salles has the good grace to say as much in his narration. The result is equal parts technical exercise and character study -– half-successful on each front, but fun for anyone who enjoys collecting human oddities.

To reiterate my most frequent complaint about Tribeca’s documentaries: Hard as Nails is a perfectly respectable video documentary that belongs on HBO (where it will eventually air), not in an overpriced screening venue. The subject is Justin Fatica’s Hard As Nails Ministries –- an evangelical organization led by the unordained Catholic Fatica. The opening sequence suggests an awesome blend of The 700 Club and Jackass, as Fatica bellows at a group of students that Christ loves them. How much does he love them? To demonstrate, Fatica stands telling a girl repeatedly that he loves her while a flunky hits him really hard on the back with a wooden plank over and over again. The effect is supposedly to dramatize the pain Christ bore for humanity, but the kid seems to be putting a little too much smirking joy into his work, and as for the effect on the kids -– who knows.

If Hard As Nails is supposed to be some kind of expose, it’s impossible to tell; the documentary never tips its hand, and director David Holbrooke hasn’t done so publicly either. Fatica has a few more shock tactics in hand –- one of his regular features is to get a member of his team to stand up, yell that she’s fat repeatedly, and then inform everyone that it’s her inner beauty that matters -– but he’s really not that outrageous in the overall scheme of the evangelical world, and his sincerity is unquestionable. A weird combination of pumped-up thick-neck and endlessly zealous Christian, Fatica yells, cries and bullies his charges into conversion and commitment. (The Catholic diocese of Burlington ends up banning him from preaching in all Catholic churches in Vermont, and one school has to cancel half of his appearances after freaked-out kids start wailing for guidance counselors.) The results are certainly compelling, although the first 10 minutes are basically the entire film; Holbrooke shows us the ministry’s fundraising success but never manages to suggest any kind of progress made over the time spanned by the documentary. It’s fun, but you could stay home and watch TBN for free. 

Discuss these and other Tribeca titles at Spout:

The Hammer
On the Downlow 
The Polymath, or the Life and Opinions of Samuel R. Delany, Gentleman   
 Why didn't anybody tell me it would be this bad in Afghanistan   
Santiago
Hard as Nails Syndicated Feed From:The Reeler</spout:body></item>
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