Capturing the Friedmans

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one of those angry conservative reviews of f-911 dismissed this as well, absolutely maddening.

as far as 'clarity' goes it seems uh clear that SOME horrible shit was done, but not nearly of the degree for which he was convicted. wierdly, i'd read about the son who was a clown years before.

g--ff (gcannon), Sunday, 5 September 2004 05:35 (nineteen years ago) link

Ally and I rented this on DVD last week. I slightly resent the film putting me in the position of viewer/juror because the information presented to me was inadequate to make me feel confident in any kind of decision I made about the guys' guilt - the heavy bias on all sides means you can't trust anyone's story completely (or at all). I'm wrestling with whether a responsible film maker leaves a case like that as open as he did, or if he should have helped viewers to come to a decision. I just feel like something's been left out and wonder if he deliberately interviewed victims or 'victims' who were a bit nutty to up the entertainment and/or intrigue.

Madchen (Madchen), Sunday, 5 September 2004 20:09 (nineteen years ago) link

seven years pass...

watching this last night made me sort of re-assess the whole sandusky thing

My conclusions: Jesse's lawyer seems like a lying shitbag. Arnie was clearly guilty, by his own admission, of pedophilia, but not the particular crimes he was actually convicted of - whether or not that's justice, eh I dunno.

Full Frontal Newtity (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 1 February 2012 17:44 (twelve years ago) link

eight months pass...

Saw this for the first time today. I had a copy for a long time, but I couldn't watch it. I dunno...I needed to work up to sitting down with a movie like that.

David interests me the most of all of them more for his viciousness towards his mother than anything. Like it's an extreme position he's built as a counterbalance of what he knows about his father? Or more? I dunno. The family dynamic, such as was shown, was really interesting because they lived SO much through the camera already, they were so used to performing already, maybe the vehement mother hatred is a performance too. What *isn't* a performance in that family, with those sons?

I was also weirdly reminded of my childhood...had a pretty rocky, dysfunctional period through my teens at home that was pretty fucking crazy at times. And yet every Christmas, we would all get together and play and laugh and put on a 'hey it's christmas be happy' show for each other, as if that was the only thing that would stop us from seeing what we'd become. That if we could just keep recreating our childhood, everything would be ok.

Also I found this on the Wikipedia page which may explain more of the movie's deliberately ambiguous tone:
It has since emerged that Jarecki funded Jesse Friedman's appeal.[13] Writing for The Village Voice, Debbie Nathan — who was hired by Jarecki as a consultant after having been interviewed for the film — wrote of Jarecki, "Polling viewers at Sundance in January, he was struck by how they were split over Arnold and Jesse's guilt. Since then, he's crafted a marketing strategy based on ambiguity, and during Q&As and interviews, he has studiously avoided taking a stand

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 17 October 2012 23:54 (eleven years ago) link

1 of my all-time favs. i would say i've thought a lot abt why it's particularly so compelling and yeah, the ambiguity, combined with so much damn footage of everything are really important imo.

the 1 minute of david's "video diary" near the very beginning is SO FUCKING AMAZING

i think in the commentary or somewhere jarecki talks abt the dinner footage i think from the night before the father is taking the plea being a 2 hr unbroken tape and that it basically was dramatic enough to be releaseable as a film itself

johnny crunch, Thursday, 18 October 2012 00:18 (eleven years ago) link

that dinner footage was off the chain.

set the controls for the heart of the sun (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 18 October 2012 03:12 (eleven years ago) link

I was on the edge of my seat for this entire movie. Even though it is just a clip show.

Jeff, Thursday, 18 October 2012 03:21 (eleven years ago) link

seven years pass...

Finally saw this since the Sup Doc podcast got around to it on today's episode (haven't heard it yet, obv.) Boy that was a watch, to put it glibly. I found myself thinking more about how it reads in an era where the police are more suspect than ever, while new hysterias rise in turn, while still noting that central awfulness in the family's experiences themselves. I gather there were attempts by Jesse to clear his name up through 2015 but maybe nothing more since. (And Seth's -- I suppose continued? -- silence has a certain...I don't know if 'dignity' is a good word or not, it seems very wrong to say that.) But also I thought about how some of those lines about their intrafamily dynamics in general remind me of things I've heard from people I know well about their own upbringings, an experience I'm glad I don't have.

Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 15 September 2020 00:39 (three years ago) link

I haven't seen this in years, but what Madchen said above resonated with me-- I resented the film, resented everything about the experience, tbh. I remember chain-smoking a lot after I finished watching it.

healthy cocaine off perfect butts (the table is the table), Tuesday, 15 September 2020 01:39 (three years ago) link


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