Showing posts with label documentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label documentary. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 February 2015

Bill Cunningham

I finally got to watch the 2011  Bill Cunningham New York documentary on iTunes recently and would highly suggest you watch it! It's a film by Richard Press and Philip Gefter who spent two years following the fashion photographer Bill Cunningham around New York, capturing his amazing life.

Bill was born in 1926 and worked in advertising, had his own hat business, and wrote for fashion publications, until he started photographing fashion. This finally led to a job as fashion photographer for the NY Times, where he takes street photos of the fashion-inspired of NY and then creates a montage of the trends for the 'On the Street' page. He has endless energy and travels around New York on an old bicycle, wearing his signature blue Parisian street cleaners jacket, whilst photographing the fashion-conscious of New York. He does it amazingly well, capturing fleeting moments with humour and respect. He also does commentary for some of theses photos, which you can hear here.

Bill is quite an inspiration and a true illustration of someone who is passionate about what they do to the point that it almost becomes a religion. He leads a life of simplicity and solitude living, until recently, in a studio apartment in Carnegie Hall with no kitchen and a bathroom down the hall. His bed is a camp bed surrounded by filing cabinets containing all the photos he's taken. His life is simple, yet it appears to be all that he needs and he is amazingly happy and philosophical about it. The only other resident living at Carnegie Hall was 98 year old photographer Editta Sherman, an amazing character who was interviewed in a selection of dramatic outfits and ill-fitting wigs. She spends time reminiscing about their lives and at first she seems rather mad. It's not until she starts to show her photographs that you see what an amazing talent she had. 







Monday, 16 April 2012

Bombay Beach

A recent flight from Tokyo to London meant twelve hours of trying to keep busy. This usually means trawling through a pretty random selection of chick flicks and action movies, but I was very happy to come across a documentary called Bombay Beach. It is a beautifully shot piece, following three residents of Bombay Beach, a once smart vacation resort in Southern California in the 1950s that is now a rather sad and desolate place.

The director, Alma Har'el, spent several months living there and filming the residents and she has created a film that is in turns uplifting and very sad. This is helped by the beautiful cinematography (reminiscent of a William Eggleston photograph) and the haunting sound track using music by Beirut and Bob Dylan.

You can find out more about the film here.



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