The Typewriter the Rifle & the Movie Camera
((British/U.S. -- Docu -- Color/B&W))
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While much of Fuller's commentary is highly charged and entertaining, some of it represents questionable digressions from the matters at hand and may leave some viewers adrift.
Fuller's hard-hitting cinematic style often been has compared with tabloid journalism, and writer-director Adam Simon touches the important bases of Fuller's early training as a copy boy and crime reporter, as well as his indelible experiences on D-Day and liberating concentration camps in World War II.
But Fuller's career in Hollywood, which began in earnest in the late 1940s and saw him move from major studio work in the '50s into more haphazard experiences in the indie and international realms thereafter, goes entirely unanalyzed.
A very different, but welcome, docu would quiz some of Fuller's collaborators , do a bit of investigative work of its own and come up with a more complete picture of the man and his remarkable accomplishments.
Instead, Simon and Robbins have opted to include observations from three of Fuller's most illustrious younger admirers, Jim Jarmusch, Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino.
Of them, only Scorsese, always an invaluable contributor to such buff undertakings, provides any revelations, especially when he describes how one of the fights in "Raging Bull" was directly inspired by a sequence in Fuller's "Steel Helmet," with appropriate illustration from clips.
Excerpts from Fuller films gratifyingly occupy much of the running time, and they are of uniformly excellent visual quality and well-edited to make their points, even if quite a few films are omitted. Interviews also are shot in an eye-catching way to keep the film visually stimulating at all times.
Docu is intelligent and represents its subject in an accurate way, but falls short of fully explicating his incredibly rich personality, career and life.
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