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David Holzman's Diary
Theatrical Release Date: 2011 06 15 (USA - Limited Rerelease)
UPC: 738329075729
Studio: Kino Video
Summary: Improvisational filmmaker Jim McBride knew enough of the "cinema verite" genre to poke fun at it in David Holzman's Diary. L.M. "Kit" Carson plays Holzman, who tries to put all of his life experiences on celluloid. His insistence upon poking his camera where it isn't wanted results only in irritation, alienation, and a few bloody noses. As Holzman's life (and his film) becomes harder to follow, the audience is liable to be as confused as Our Hero, especially if they make the mistake of taking this whole thing seriously. Filmed in five days on a $2500 budget, David Holzman's Diary won both the Mannheim and Pesaro Film Festival awards; history does not record whether the judges caught on that McBride was pulling their legs. The director, incidentally, is the same Jim McBride who years later went "mainstream" with such films as The Big Easy (1987) and Great Balls of Fire (1989). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
Category: Avant-garde / Exp
Awards: U.S. National Film Registry – Library of Congress
Features:
Three bonus films by the director:
My Girlfriend's Wedding (1969)
Pictures from Life's other Side (1971)
My Son's Wedding to My Sister-in-Law (2008)
David Holzman's Diary
Format: Blu-ray
Release Date: 08/16/2011
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Pre-1954 Standard
Audio: DD1 Dolby Digital Mono
Runtime: 73 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Lucia Bozzola
In his genuinely independent film shot on weekends with borrowed equipment, news-cameraman-turned-film director Jim McBride interrogated Jean-Luc Godard's claim that film is truth at 24 frames per second. A mock-documentary that mordantly sends up the notion of the 1960s Direct Cinema movement that a camera can record reality without interfering with it, the film presents the pre-scripted exploits of L.M. Kit Carson's Holzman, staged to seem like a documentary of a real person's life, that become increasingly chaotic as his filming of his life starts to take over his life. Media-made reality perverts what it tries to capture, as voyeurism replaces relationships with other people, including David's bond with his exasperated girlfriend. Holzman's periodic presence in front of his camera, or filming himself in a mirror, calls attention to the act of filming and to the person who shapes what is seen. One of a group of films in the late 1960s and early 1970s that dealt with Vietnam-era questions of media-made fact and fiction, including Medium Cool (1969) and The Last Movie (1971), David Holzman's Diary puts that tension in a personal context, revealing the impact of movie-made illusions outside media industries. McBride and Carson themselves moved to mainstream Hollywood with their 1983 remake of Jean-Luc Godard's Breathless. ~ Lucia Bozzola, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Jack Baran
Actor
Lorenzo Mans
Actor
Bob Lesser
Actor
Eileen Dietz
Actor
Fern McBride
Actor
Louise Levine
Actor
Michael Levine
Actor
Jim McBride
Director
Jim McBride
Producer
Jim McBride
Screenwriter
L.M. Kit Carson
Actor
Country: USA
