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Strange Culture (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:21
Fresh:19
Rotten:2
Average Rating:7.4/10
Runtime: 75 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis:
Lynn Herschman Leeson returns to Sundance (Teknolust premiered at the 2002 Festival) with Strange Culture, a brilliantly conceived documentary that breaks conventional rules out of the necessity to...
Lynn Herschman Leeson returns to Sundance (Teknolust premiered at the 2002 Festival) with Strange Culture, a brilliantly conceived documentary that breaks conventional rules out of the necessity to tell the story.
Artist and college professor Steve Kurtz was preparing for a MASS MoCA exhibition that lets audiences test whether food has been genetically modified when, days before the opening, his wife tragically died of heart failure. Distraught, Kurtz called 911, but when medics arrived, they became suspicious of his art supplies and called the FBI. Dozens of agents in haz-mat suits sifted through his home and impounded his computers, books, cat, and even his wife's body. The government held Kurtz as a suspected terrorist, and, nearly three years later, the charges have not been dropped. He still faces up to 20 years in prison.
Because Kurtz cannot legally talk about the case, Leeson enlists actors, including Tilda Swinton, Josh Kornbluth, and Peter Coyote, to interpret the story. Leeson skillfully weaves dramatic reenactment, news footage, animation, testimonials, and footage of Kurtz himself into a sophisticated documentary about post-9/11 paranoia and the risks artists face when their work questions government policies.
--© Sundance Film Festival
Starring: Tilda Swinton, Peter Coyote, Thomas Jay Ryan, Josh Kornbluth
Starring: Tilda Swinton, Peter Coyote, Thomas Jay Ryan, Josh Kornbluth
Director: Lynn Hershmann-Leeson
Director: Lynn Hershmann-Leeson
Reviews for Strange Culture
A brilliant statement on artistic freedom and the dangers it faces. This film should be seen, should be discussed and is an important document on our times.
A strange and compelling Kafka-esque account of an American artist caught up in Bush's war on terror.
Younger filmmakers should be looking to Hershman Leeson for lessons on how to reinvent old forms while at the same time telling an urgently topical story.
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