At Friday's premiere here in LA, where Joan and one of her three directors were interviewed, I couldn't stop wondering if the admiring throng of young people grasped (as her director put it at the end): she still stands for freedom and struggle, but it's been lifted to a different level.
This is not the illusion of candor, the gloss of self-serving authenticity, or a carefully curated story of personal growth. This is the real deal, based on journals, home movies, tape recordings, interviews, and private artwork.
Back in the day, did we realize we were lost in the fog of fame as well as the fog of war? With fresh cinematography and subtle narrative structure, "I Am a Noise" blows away a lot of fog at a lot of levels.
This is not the illusion of candor, the gloss of self-serving authenticity, or a carefully curated story of personal growth. This is the real deal, based on journals, home movies, tape recordings, interviews, and private artwork.
Back in the day, did we realize we were lost in the fog of fame as well as the fog of war? With fresh cinematography and subtle narrative structure, "I Am a Noise" blows away a lot of fog at a lot of levels.
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