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The pre-festival buzz on South by Southwest 2002 was all about Journeys with George, journalist Alexandra
Pelosi's home movie of the 2000 presidential campaign.
Shot on a handheld camcorder over the course of several months, Journeys plunges into the midst of the traveling
press corps as they follow George W. Bush down the primary trail. Pelosi, an NBC news producer at the time,
captures the candidate in any number of revealing modes, from Cheeto-chomping prankster to
thin-skinned blueblood to surprisingly intimate confidant.
It's an eye-opener for anyone who ever scoffed at the notion of Bush as a
charismatic figure or effective one-on-one campaigner.
It's no whitewash, though; the members of the press are on hand to get in
their digs, and there's never much doubt on which end of the political spectrum most of
them reside.
It seemed only appropriate that the film had its world premiere at the
Paramount Theater in Austin, Texas, only a few short blocks down Congress Avenue from the
capitol building where Bush's political career was launched. But while Journeys
with George kicked off the festival with a bang, it was only the beginning of the
story. As usual, SXSW presented a mix of
world premieres (Ethan Hawke's directorial debut Chelsea Walls), homegrown features (Jeff
Stolhand's Master of the Game, the omnibus Six in Austin), and the tried and true (John Sayles
and Troma Films retrospectives, a digitally spiffed-up reissue of Martin Scorsese's The Last Waltz). Here is a sample of the best and worst this
year's festival had to offer.
Home Movie
Chris Smith's American Movie was one of the best
documentaries of recent years, and also one of the most misunderstood. Audiences who felt Smith was mocking his
unsophisticated small town subjects rather than celebrating them may have their minds
changed by Home Movie, in which Smith takes his
cameras into five unusual American homes. There's
a houseboat on the Louisiana bayou, a home constructed in an abandoned missile silo, and a
fortress of gadgetry that could pass for the residence of a second-rate Batman villain,
among others. Of course, Smith is less
interested in the houses themselves than the people who choose to live in them. His delight in getting to spend time with these
offbeat personalities is infectious, and makes Home
Movie a true pleasure.
Six in Austin
It must have seemed like a good idea at the time. Inspired by 1965's Six in Paris, a compilation
film bringing together top talents of the French New Wave like Eric Rohmer and Jean-Luc
Godard, filmmakers Zack and Wyatt Phillips recruited a handful of fellow Austinites for
this collection of shorts. Shot on digital
video ranging in quality from barely adequate to barely watchable, Six in Austin is an interminable exercise in
self-indulgence. The kickoff segment, David
and Nathan Zellner's "Rummy," is slight but amusing, and it's all downhill from
there. Six in Austin concludes with the Phillips
brothers' unbearable "Carlos," a shaggy dog story that takes viewers on a tour
of the Austin public transit system in what feels like real time. While SXSW's commitment to local talent is to be
applauded, one has to wonder if this homegrown effort could have possibly made it into the
festival on its own merit. The overlap
between members of the SXSW staff and the Six in
Austin crew does nothing to assuage those doubts.
- Scott Von Doviak