Beware of Mr. Baker

Beware of Mr. Baker

Beware of Mr. Baker (Director: Jay Bulger): The film opens with the unlikely scenario of its subject, drummer Ginger Baker, breaking the nose of the film’s director with a well-placed shot from his walking cane. Beware of Mr. Baker indeed. It’s a perfect table-setter for first-time director Jay Bulger’s biographical film on the crusty, unpredictable musician, considered by many to be the originator of modern rock and roll drumming. His reclusive tendencies and fairly obscure musical output over the past three decades (save for a high profile live reunion in 2005 with Cream, the band with which he’s most associated) have only increased the sense of mystery and legend surrounding the notorious wild man.

Bulger first brought the updated Baker story to the public in “The Devil and Ginger Baker”, his revealing 2009 written piece (PDF download), which Rolling Stone magazine printed despite the fact that Bulger had misrepresented himself as a writer for the publication in order to gain access to the musician. I vividly remember reading that story and thinking what a great doc subject Baker would make, but figured that would never happen due to his mercurial temperament. Bulger somehow ingratiated himself enough to Baker to end up staying for three months at the drummer’s fortified South African compound while working on the Rolling Stone piece, with the hours of filmed interviews from that experience laying the foundation for the documentary. As excellent as “The Devil and Ginger Baker” was, Beware of Mr. Baker does it one better – his tumultuous life story is so intriguing that it virtually demands the full-length doc treatment.

Bulger assembles a Who’s Who of rock drummers singing Baker’s praises, including Stewart Copeland, Lars Ulrich, Neil Peart, Chad Smith, Charlie Watts, Nick Mason, and Bill Ward. Also weighing in is Johnny Rotten in a couple of amusing scenes that bookend the film. It’s worth noting that Baker despised much of the music that Cream influenced – he says punk “should have been aborted,” cringes upon hearing he had an influence on heavy metal, and mocks the talents of John Bonham and Keith Moon. Cream bandmates Eric Clapton and Jack Bruce provide some fascinating insight into the difficulties of working with a loose cannon drummer who was well into the throes of heroin addiction during the supergroup’s short two year lifespan. Clapton’s conversations reveal a love/hate relationship with the drummer and he makes the interesting observation that although he’s known him much longer, perhaps Bulger knows the enigmatic Baker better than he does due to the fact that unlike himself, the director has now spent so much time in close proximity with Baker.

The “career retrospective” portion of the film demonstrates Baker’s propensity for short-lived group stints and burned bridges, resulting in an increasingly shrinking pool of musicians willing to work with him and fuelling the drummer’s feelings of alienation. Baker’s love of jazz is a key focal point of the documentary – he began as a jazz drummer and worshipped the genre’s biggest percussionists, even boldly organizing a televised drum-off with some of them as an excuse to both play with the jazz drumming elite and to earn their respect. Another focal point is Baker’s time spent in Africa in the 70s, where he explored his passion for the continent’s music and worked with Afrobeat icon Fela Kuti, before eventually being forced out of Nigeria due to political unrest.

Nearly all of Bulger’s fiery interviews with Baker feature the drummer chain smoking while propped in a recliner; at one point, Bulger asks his subject to remove his ever-present sunglasses and, after some reluctance, Baker agrees. His eyes appear sad and rather dead-looking, showing the effects of seven decades of self-destructive behaviour and the steady helping of morphine being used to help ease his various health ailments (“God is punishing me for my past wickedness by keeping me alive and in as much pain as he can. I wasn’t planning on living this long”, he says). Some of the other fallout from his lifetime of selfish and reckless behaviour: four marriages (he’s currently married to a 29-year-old Zimbabwean woman whom he met on the Internet), estranged relationships with his kids (he once introduced his 15-year-old son to cocaine), and persistent money issues (he blew through an estimated $5 million earned from the Cream reunion and spent it on donations to animal causes and his hobby of collecting polo ponies).

Bulger applies the stylistic flourish of animated artwork to subtly advance and supplement the film’s narrative, as well as add a comedic touch in places. The German Expressionist-style art is dazzling, but the director tends to overuse the device; not to mention that the same technique using the same art style was seen last year in the U2 documentary From The Sky Down (to be fair, Bulger’s film was likely finished by the time the U2 doc came out). Aside from that, my only quibble with Beware of Mr. Baker is that it feels somewhat incomplete at 92 minutes. That’s actually a testament to how engrossing Bulger’s portrait of the irascible and uncompromising Baker is, but slightly more content would have been welcome from a documentary offering such rare access to one of rock history’s most colourful characters.

Official site of the film


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=83XdEBl0KUg
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Outing

Outing

Outing (Directors: Sebastian Meise and Thomas Reider): Sven is a young German man who faces the camera at the very beginning of this harrowing film and confesses his (unwanted) sexual attraction to young boys. His confession and participation in the film is an attempt to ensure that he never acts on this desire. It’s an admirable goal and an extremely courageous step, and yet Sven’s life is never going to be easy. Directors Meise and Reider incorporate some of Sven’s family’s home videos of his own childhood to remind the viewer that someone that many would consider a monster grew up in an environment that looked pretty normal.

Sven tries to figure out why he is the way he is, and we learn that his father was withdrawn from the family and that his mother never expressed affection for him. Perhaps his pedophilia is an attempt to hang onto his childhood or to experience childhood in a way he never did. Nonetheless, he knows his desires are dangerous, even if he can’t change them. The filmmakers follow Sven over a period of four years, checking in with him every few months to see how he’s doing. Although he is an intelligent man with a valuable profession (he’s an archaeologist), he doesn’t seem able to connect with his co-workers or neighbours. Years of keeping his secret as well as his lonely childhood have left him unable to form attachments easily, and he is constantly searching for a therapist who can help him manage his feelings. We overhear an interview with one who warns him that his social isolation only makes it easier to act on his attractions, since there’s “nothing to lose.” The irony is that because he’s unable to talk about his situation with anyone other than fellow pedophiles, he lacks a peer group who could keep him from harming a child.

As the film goes on, he seems to depend more and more on his online community, a group of pedophiles who all claim not to have acted upon their desires. But they share fantasies and photos of “cute” (though clothed) children. It’s difficult to watch, since it only seems to inflame Sven’s desire for a “relationship” with a child. Even though he knows this is inappropriate, he seems to want to test his limits and when he feels he’s succeeded (sleeping in the same bed with his young nephew, for instance), it makes him bolder, wanting to get even closer. It’s creepy but also heartbreaking, knowing that he has had so little human affection in his life.

The challenge is that there are very few therapists who know how to help people like Sven. These desires are unexplainable, and seem unchangeable. He meets an older man who, after twenty years of largely unsuccessful therapy, opts for castration surgery. It removes some of the sexual urgency, but not the fantasies. When Sven first discovered his pedophilia at the age of 16, he tried to kill himself. Facing a lifelong struggle at such a young age, he’s doing his best to appear optimistic, but despite his nervous smiles, it’s hard not to see the strain and fear on his face every time he speaks to the filmmakers.

Outing is an act of bravery from both filmmakers and subject. A therapist actually tells Sven he’s putting his life in danger by outing himself, and in another heartbreaking moment, Sven acknowledges that someone might kill him, and that “it wouldn’t be so bad.” There are no happy endings in this story. Either Sven struggles with his desire for the next 50 years, opts for drastic surgery, some hateful person kills him, or he stumbles and hurts a child and ends up in prison, where pedophiles are not particularly popular. He didn’t ask for these desires and despite his valiant efforts, he may not be able to resist them forever.

The film doesn’t have any answers, but it does put a human face on a real problem that nobody wants to acknowledge. And in a society that uses sex to manipulate ever-younger consumers, people like Sven have a more difficult road than ever. The final title card reveals that there are more than 250,000 people like Sven in Germany alone, people struggling against their pedophilic desires, who don’t want to hurt children, who hate themselves for not possessing a socially-acceptable sexual self. If we really want to protect children, we need to do a lot more to help these people and not wait for them to offend and then just lock them up. Hopefully Sven’s desperate act of courage will do some good.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GFZEeH2q09U
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Radioman

Radioman
Radioman screens on Monday April 30 at 9pm (Bloor Cinema), Wednesday May 2 at 11:45pm (Bloor Cinema) and Saturday May 5 at 4:15pm (Cumberland)

Radioman (Director: Mary Kerr): How does a former New York City homeless man become a movie industry legend? Radioman has appeared in more than 100 films and television shows since the early ’90s. With his trademark radio around his neck, he’s become a celebrity to movie stars like George Clooney, Matt Damon and Meryl Streep. Radioman is a charming film about an eccentric dreamer who finally gets his closeup.

George Clooney, Robin Williams, and Josh Brolin sit down for interviews and provide their take on Radioman. For the most part he’s described as a lovable guy who is obsessed with the movies. He’s considered to be good luck for a production and according to Radioman, every time he appears in a film it makes money – Tower Heist, The Departed, and Elf.

The celebrity aspect of Radioman is sure to make this a popular film at Hot Docs. Everyone from Paul Giamatti, Sandra Bullock, Whoopi Goldberg, Jude Law and Tom Hanks appear briefly to share their Radioman experiences. Most of these clips are quite funny, including a bizarre moment with James Gandolfini and a conversation with Ricky Gervais that left me in stitches.

Radioman is credited as Craig Castaldo on IMDB but he also goes by the name Craig Schwartz. It wasn’t clear to me in the film why he uses two names but it doesn’t really matter. Radioman is a fascinating character – a former homeless man and alcoholic who lives in a roach-infested apartment and dresses like a tramp. He rides a bicycle around New York, trolling movie sets for food and hustling for parts in films. He dreams of becoming an actor with real speaking roles instead of the small bit parts he’s landed in the past.

I found myself wanting to know more about Radioman as the film progressed. At first glance he comes across like a child, picking his nose and farting on camera but in an instant he can be quite serious and sound very intelligent. In one clip Johnny Depp questions whether Radioman is really an eccentric billionaire having a laugh at our expense.

We never see Radioman on a computer but he’s shown talking on a beat up cellphone to somebody about filming locations. Shia LaBeouf questions how Radioman can know his shooting schedule before he does. Where does Radioman get his information from? For a guy who often gets mistaken as a panhandler he seems well connected.

The film takes on a different tone when Radioman travels to Los Angeles, hoping to crash the Oscars and hang out with his Hollywood friends. He may be the king of New York when it comes to getting access to the stars but in Los Angeles he’s a nobody. Unless he’s on the guest list, Radioman is just another autograph hound, hanging around the sidewalk with the likes of Sean Young.

It was interesting to see the stark contrast between the two cities from Radioman’s perspective. Everything and everyone in LA comes across as cold and superficial compared to the people of New York, whom Radioman describes as being friendlier, warmer, and kinder.

Sadly, Radioman sees celebrities as his friends. He’s lonely and the closest thing he has to a family is the movie set. When he used to drink Radioman said he felt invincible. He thought people were laughing with him and having a good time but he came to realize that people were really laughing at him. I wonder how many of his celebrity friends are really laughing at him, merely amused by his eccentric behaviour.

You might not know who Radioman is but chances are that you’ve already seen him in a dozen films. He’s always wanted a bigger film role and I can’t think of a better opportunity than the one Mary Kerr’s documentary provides for him. I used to look forward to Stan Lee cameos in Marvel films. Now I’ll be looking for Radioman cameos in every film that is shot in New York.

Radioman Facebook Page

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Hot Docs 2012 Preview, Part 2

As promised, here are a few more films that should be on your radar at this year’s Hot Docs. We’re just a few days away now, so if you haven’t already got your tickets or passes, better get on that!

China Heavyweight

China Heavyweight (Director: Yung Chang)

Yung Chang’s previous film, Up the Yangtze (review), was both a critical and commercial success back in 2008, and I’m hoping that his knack for finding great characters who can illuminate the bigger stories behind China’s dramatic changes will make China Heavyweight another hit. This time, he follows a boxing coach on his recruiting trips into the countryside. Boxing can bring both personal rewards and collective glory to the nation, and the film explores the choices these young athletes are faced with on their path to success.

The Ambassador

The Ambassador (Director: Mads Brügger)

The director of previous Hot Docs favourite The White Chapel continues his prankish ways, this time in the heart of Africa. Brügger travels “in character” as a racist businessman to the troubled Central African Republic, ostensibly to open a match factory, but really in search of illicit diamonds. When he buys a diplomatic post, things take a turn for the tragicomic. An exploration of corruption and the ongoing pillaging of Africa by white men, this promises to be a darkly comedic look at the “Dark Continent.”

The Imposter

The Imposter (Director: Bart Layton)

In 1994 a 13-year-old boy disappears without a trace from San Antonio, Texas. Three and a half years later he is found alive, thousands of miles away in a village in southern Spain with a story of kidnap and torture. But why does he now have a strange accent and look so different? Most of all, why doesn’t his family notice? Are they so relieved to have him back home safely that they’re overlooking these anomalies? A real-life mystery that promises to be much stranger than fiction.

Outing

Outing (Directors: Sebastian Meise and Thomas Reider)

A young Swedish man recognizes in himself the darkest of desires, a sexual attraction to children. Instead of keeping this terrible secret, he reaches out, trying to set boundaries and prevent himself from hurting anyone. But how will the world react to someone like him? What resources are available to help him manage his conflicting desires? The bravery of both filmmakers and subject here deserves attention. How do we confront and treat a problem that is not going away?

Only the Young

Only the Young (Directors: Elizabeth Mims and Jason Tippet)

A story of friendship and young love plays out over one summer in the lives of a group of young people in a small desert town. I’ve heard nothing but raves about this film from people who saw it at the True/False festival, and in a world where the old often complain about the young, it’s refreshing to see a film about young people who are genuine, earnest, and doing their best to be good people. I’ve purposely scheduled this as my last film of the festival.

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Hot Docs 2012 Preview, Part 1

It’s hard to believe, but I will be attending my ninth Hot Docs this year. My favourite film festival celebrates its 19th edition from April 26th through May 6th with an abundance of new energy. From a new programming director (Charlotte Cook) to a newly-reopened showcase Bloor Cinema, this year’s festival promises to satisfy and even exceed Toronto documentary fans’ high expectations.

Here are a few films on my personal radar. If I’ve been able to see the film ahead of the festival, I’ll provide a capsule review. Otherwise, I’ll just tell you why I’m interested in seeing it.

Look for a few more of these in the weeks to come, along with full reviews from me and the “Doc Brothers,” Jay and Drew Kerr.

Scarlet Road

Scarlet Road (Director: Catherine Scott)

It’s a terrible and probably offensive stereotype, sure, but Rachel Wotton really is a “hooker with a heart of gold.” This Australian sex worker specializes in working with disabled clients, believing that everyone has a right to express their sexuality. The film spends a bit too much time following Rachel around as she attends conferences and protests, but does manage to provide some great insights into the sex lives of people who are too often marginalized. More time spent interviewing both the clients and Rachel would have been enlightening, since the film raises all kinds of issues around both the dignity of sex work and of living a full human existence, no matter what society thinks.

Finding Truelove

Finding Truelove (Director: Sam Kuhn)

A group of twentysomething hipster friends in Portland buy an old yearbook and become obsessed with the graduating class. When they realize the class will celebrate their 20 year reunion, they buy tickets online and set out on a road trip. This “oh-so-ironic” homage to the ’90s falls flat as the gang try so desperately to have “cool” experiences with 40-year-olds whose personas they have created in their fantasies. They get a comeuppance of sorts, but the whole adventure is not particularly satisfying to anyone.

Off Label

Off Label (Directors: Donal Mosher and Michael Palmieri)

Directed by the team behind the deeply personal October Country (2009) (review), this film takes on the epidemic of prescription drug use among Americans, especially “off label” use, where the drug is taken for reasons other than the medically indicated purpose. I am curious to see how filmmakers who seem to approach their work from such a deeply humane and impressionistic perspective take on subject matter usually covered in a more “issue doc” fashion.

Tchoupitoulas

Tchoupitoulas (Directors: Turner Ross and Bill Ross)

The brothers Ross previously made 45635, a gorgeously meditative look at their own hometown of Sidney, Ohio. Here they turn their attention to New Orleans, following a group of three teen boys as they sneak out one night to discover the city and its music.

¡Vivan las antipodas!

¡Vivan las antipodas! (Director: Victor Kossakovsky)

An anthropological reflection, similar to films like Life in a Day or even Babies, Kossakovsky’s documentary takes the idea of “antipodes” (geographical points on opposite sides of the globe) as its starting point. Contrasting ways of life in 8 different places (4 pairs of antipodes), his camera lingers and even flips to reveal the many facets of life on this planet.

Meanwhile in Mamelodi

Meanwhile in Mamelodi (Director: Benjamin Kahlmeyer)

Shot in the Mamelodi township during the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa, this film examines the football phenomenon from the perspective of those just outside of the big party. The euphoria that greeted the beginning of the tournament (and the South African team’s better-than-expected performance) gradually gives way to a more realistic picture of their chances, both in the sporting arena and more personally.

Stay tuned for more previews as the festival approaches. And visit the Hot Docs box office at 783 Bathurst (or online) to get your tickets.

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