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Karina on SpoutBlog

True/False: Gonzo

True/False co-director David Wilson presented recent Oscar winner Alex Gibney with the festival???s True Vision Award on Saturday, before a screening of Gibney???s latest opus, Gonzo. The film takes a comprehensive look at the zeitgeist-defining glory years and post-middle-age decline of journalist Hunter S. Thompson, whose commitment to truth through fictionalization inspired Wilson to brand him ???a man who could well be the patron saint of True/False.??? In introducing Gibney, Wilson noted that the festival was proud to host the director on his first stop after last week???s Oscar ceremony. When he reached the mic, Gibney corrected the record. ???This is not my first stop after that event in Hollywood,??? the filmmaker said. ???I looked at that as a warm-up to True/False.???

The True Vision Award is designed to honor mid-career filmmakers who, in the words of Wilson, ???are pushing the non-fiction form forward.??? It???s a bit of a disappointment, then, that formally, Gonzo swings wildly between stylistic experimentation and rote talking-head traditionalism. Shooting on high def video to appease producers Todd Wagner and Mark Cuban, who will release the film theatrically under the auspices of Magnolia before broadcasting Gonzo on their HD Net TV, Gibney seems to struggle to transcend the standard visual tropes of the medium. The bulk of the film consists of sit-down interviews with expert witnesses, including Thompson’s son and two ex-wives, Jann Wenner and Pat Buchanan; much of the rest of the footage is culled from fiction films about Thompson and previous documentaries. When Gibney does take chances??????such as when he casts actors in a home-video style reenactment set to an actual audio recording of Thompson’s visit to a Nevada taco stand, the transcription of which formed a chapter of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas??????the end result is not dissimilar to something one might see on basic cable. There are inspired ideas here, but with its sometimes awkward video effects and general made-for-TV patina, the whole thing looks a little downmarket for a filmmaker of Gibney’s caliber.

Which is not to say that Gonzo doesn???t offer valuable insight into Thompson???s life, work, and, especially, the power of his celebrity. (more…)


Originally posted on:SpoutBlog » karina

posted on Sunday, March 02, 2008 5:00 PM by Karina


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