(2003)

User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
A laudable experiment in film, set in San Francisco
jims-2810 February 2005
Enlightened Pictures presents its full-length video set in San Francisco during the hottest days of Internet start ups. The personalities, in a fast-paced improvised sequence, tell their unique stories and common themes with tender attention to the subtlety and brutality of relationships. It's about making babies and money. It's about energy and lots of it. The full-dimensioned spray of relationships quickly reveals who is with whom.  

The production rests on solid performances by the extensive cast including Lee Flores Tsoflias, Mark Rachel, Kerry Gudjohnson, and Matthew Gardner, each commanding attention by alluding to their delicious secrets, each providing personal support for the thematic and photographic structure of the unfolding drama.  David Babich plays Dean, a wild meteor of a man arcing into close orbit around his beloved, played by Radha Lorca. 

Daniel Gamburg's editing distributed the one hour and forty-three minute show rather fairly among a core cast of ten or so. The crew took chances with the shoot and it paid off in plenty of action and movement. The neighborhoods are vividly shot and perhaps more could be made of that, as if the characters of IPO, in all their specificity, were part of much larger story, in idea as well as in vision. Shot without a script, the entire movie was improvised, producing a selection wide and rich enough in choices to enable the editor to assemble a set of interleaving stories rising to climax.  

If there was a flaw, it was the suddenness of the reinforcing of the impending climax by Dean in the scene in Tahoe. But then again, someone would have stepped forth to take the scene after the confession of Mathew and Kerry. And it returned Frank Torrano, as the policeman, with vengeance (and Dean his target), characterized the ending, and returned the viewer and viewed to constant change.  The experiment is an exploration of autonomy as illustrated by the power and independence of personality.   

The production relied on the teamwork of Barewitness. Their website features shorter work and trailers as well as contact info about the members.  

Jim Strope
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
unbelievably amateurish
curtis-6212 November 2004
Warning: Spoilers
A lame improv comedy/drama about the 2000 IPO scene in SF.

It got a little stale in the can, and that's not all that's wrong. Jeeze, people, when the dialogue is inaudible, reshoot or do ADR. Oh wait, that isn't spontaneous enough for you? Congratulations, hippie dude, the sixties are over. The camera in IPO looks like it was operated by my six-year-old brother - in fact, it may have been his camera ("My First Sony!"). But maybe it was just the bad digital projector at the Roxie.

As for the story: a muddled hash with occasional flashes of decent acting. I'm sorry, but Mike Leigh actually cares how his films turn out. How in the world did this get to Slamdance? "E pagato," perhaps, as the Italians say...
0 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed