(Watch the trailer here.)
Synopsis
Documentary filmmaker Doug Block had every
reason to believe his parent’s 54-year marriage was a good one. So he
isn’t prepared when, just a few months after his mothers’ unexpected
death, his 83-year old father, Mike, phones to announce that he’s
moving to Florida to live with “Kitty”, his secretary from 40 years
before. Always close to his mother and equally distant from his
father, he’s stunned and suspicious.
When Mike and Kitty
marry and sell the longtime family home, Doug returns to suburban Long
Island with camera in hand for one last visit. And there, among the
lifetime of memories being packed away forever, he discovers 3 large
boxes filled with his moms’ daily diaries going back 35 years.
Realizing he has only a few short weeks before the movers come and his
dad will be gone for good, the veteran documentarian sticks around,
determined to investigate the mystery of his parents’ marriage.
Through increasingly candid conversations with family members and
friends, and constantly surprising diary revelations, Doug finally
comes to peace with two parents who are far more complex and troubled
than he ever imagined.
Both unexpectedly funny and heartbreaking, 51 Birch Street
is the first-person account of Block’s unpredictable journey through a
whirlwind of dramatic life-changing events: the death of his mother,
the uncovering of decades of family secrets, and the ensuing
reconciliation with his father. What begins as his own intimate,
autobiographical story, soon evolves into a broader meditation on the
universal themes of love, marriage, fidelity and the mystery of family.
51 Birch Street spans 60 years and 3 generations, and weaves
together hundreds of faded snapshots, 8mm home movies and two decades
of verité footage. The result is a timeless tale of what can happen
when our most fundamental assumptions about family are suddenly called
into question.
Reviews
TORONTO STAR
"51 Birch Street is the latest autobiographical doc sensation"
Rene Rodriguez, MIAMI HERALD
"Extraordinary… spellbinding… an utterly absorbing mystery"
Eddie Cockrell, VARIETY
“A triumph of true-life storytelling… with every bit the emotional punch of the more sensationalist doc fare”
David Hudson, GREENCINE DAILY
"With 51 Birch Street,
Doug Block has fashioned an engaging and at times even suspenseful
mystery out of his family's story and, along the way, a social history
of the American family unfolds, from the uptight 50s through the 70s (a
swath of story worthy of Updike, Cheever or Roth) to the present."
Andrew O'Hehir, SALON.COM
"Block has
made a sad, delightful and half-accidental movie about his own parents
which was the outstanding personal documentary at this year's (SXSW)
festival... Profound and humane."
Tom Hall, INDIEWIRE
"Exceptional ...
This film should become a huge hit because its central question is
universal; if you could learn everything about your parents' lives,
would you really want to know? ... This is wonderful non-fiction
storytelling."
Bruce Kirkland, TORONTO SUN
"The film
is a revelation because it is so folksy and so disarming that we can
see ourselves and our own family histories in a fresh new light."
Jim Emerson, RogerEbert.com
"As engrossing as any murder mystery but without melodrama or histrionics, could be this year's Capturing the Friedmans."
Anthony Kaufman, INDIEWIRE
"51 Birch Street
is a beautiful, resonant piece of work about how little we know about
our parents' lives, about marriage and fidelity, loss and
reconciliation. I've often felt that the personal documentary has
overstayed its welcome, but Birch Street reaffirms my faith in the
form."
Geoff Pevere, TORONTO STAR
"Tears your heart out ... as haunted by ghosts as anything found in a Hollywood horror movie."
