George Washington - Criterion Collection

George Washington - Criterion Collection


Starring:Candace Evanofski, Donald Holden, Damian Jewan Lee, Curtis Cotton III, Rachael Handy, Paul Schneider (IV), Eddie Rouse, Janet Taylor (II), Derricka Rolle, Ebony Jones, Jonathan Davidson, Scott Clackum, Beau Nix, Jason Shirley, William Tipton, Balla Moussa Keita, Will Janowitz, Shannon Davis (II), Ryan Morris, Christian Gustaitis
Director: David Gordon Green, Clu Gulager
Studio: Criterion
Product Type: DVD

Editorial Review:
Amazon.com
George Washington is surely one of the most visually arresting debuts in recent American cinema. Loitering among the dilapidated machinery and detritus littering a small town in North Carolina, 24-year-old director David Gordon Green and cinematographer Tim Orr transform the listless confines of growing up poor into breathtaking beauty. Green has referenced Terence Malick's Days of Heaven (1978) as an overriding influence, and the languorous grace of his portrait of childhood lives up to the comparison.

Tracing the interwoven stories of a group of kids, black and white, over a few pivotal days and one accidental death, Green elicits nuanced performances from a mostly nonprofessional cast and captures an understated poetry through clearly improvised dialogue. Where Harmony Korine's depiction of childhood outcasts in Gummo goes astray in its insistence upon depravity and shrill eccentricity, George Washington maintains a perfect balance between oddity, loosely configured realism, and the sublime. --Fionn Meade
Description
Over the course of one hot summer, a group of children in the rural south are forced to confront a tangle of difficult choices in a decaying world. An ambitiously constructed, sensuously photographed meditation on adolescence, the first feature film by director David Gordon Green features breakout performances from an award-winning ensemble cast.
George Washington - Criterion Collection
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • I should like this film, but....
  • A dazzling and imaginative debut
  • I hope you live forever.
  • The ghetto as a poem. A lingering portrait.
  • Considerable Talent on Display Here
George Washington - Criterion Collection
Starring: Candace Evanofski , Donald Holden , Damian Jewan Lee , Curtis Cotton III , and Rachael Handy
Director: David Gordon Green , and Clu Gulager
Manufacturer: Criterion
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD

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ASIN: B00005V8TD
Release Date: 2002-03-12

Amazon.com

George Washington is surely one of the most visually arresting debuts in recent American cinema. Loitering among the dilapidated machinery and detritus littering a small town in North Carolina, 24-year-old director David Gordon Green and cinematographer Tim Orr transform the listless confines of growing up poor into breathtaking beauty. Green has referenced Terence Malick's Days of Heaven (1978) as an overriding influence, and the languorous grace of his portrait of childhood lives up to the comparison.

Tracing the interwoven stories of a group of kids, black and white, over a few pivotal days and one accidental death, Green elicits nuanced performances from a mostly nonprofessional cast and captures an understated poetry through clearly improvised dialogue. Where Harmony Korine's depiction of childhood outcasts in Gummo goes astray in its insistence upon depravity and shrill eccentricity, George Washington maintains a perfect balance between oddity, loosely configured realism, and the sublime. --Fionn Meade

Description

Over the course of one hot summer, a group of children in the rural south are forced to confront a tangle of difficult choices in a decaying world. An ambitiously constructed, sensuously photographed meditation on adolescence, the first feature film by director David Gordon Green features breakout performances from an award-winning ensemble cast.

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars I should like this film, but...........2007-03-19

On paper, I should love this film. It has many thing I admire in films. It's beautifully shot in scope, it has a leisurely pace to it, and it's very understated at times. But it's also muddled, sloppily edited, incoherent, and the dialogue leaves something to be desired. The film has a real disjointed feel to it, and I don't think this is deliberate. David Gordon Green's follow up to this, All the Real Girls, had the same sloppy craftmanship that this film does, except that film has better performances. Some might say Green is attempting an expressionistic type of film, but he doesn't really pull it off. Directors who do make expressionistic films like this one was trying to be (Tarkovsky, Tarr, Sokurov, Kieslowski) do pull it off, and their films feel remarkably coherent, despite the ambiguity that exists in them. Here it doesn't work. Green gets points for making an independent film that really isn't like Hollywood at all (many indie films have an eye towards the mainstream), but it doesn't fully work.

4 out of 5 stars A dazzling and imaginative debut.......2006-09-21

I loved this film - I love the episodic story, which unfolds at a languid, lifelike pace - this subtlety captures the feel of life in a Southern city - GEORGE WASHINGTON was set in, and mostly filmed in Winston-Salem, NC (part of a metro area of over 1,000,000 people, though one wouldn't exactly see this in the film), one of the older and more industrial cities in the state, with a cast of locals.

You also don't see a trace of the mint julieps-and-kudzu (or hamfisted BLUE VELVET/DELIVERANCE freakfests) version of the South still favored by filmmakers who set stories in the region. The sort of STEEL MAGNOLIA faux-drawwwwliness that has crept out of the quaintest and cutsiest Southern lit is completely banished from GEORGE WASHINGTON; a move I'd advise just about anyone wishing to set (or shoot) a film in this part of the country follow. In another wise decision, Green sidesteps the reflexive quirk and posturing that infects too much American indie film.

I also love - finally - seeing a film with a fascinating story, enacted through a predominantly African-American cast that dodges the clichés and stereotypes seen in 'black film.' A rather depressingly common filmmaker complaint is the utter impossibility in getting more literary or intellectually intricate African-American stories off the ground in Hollywood (witness the essential disappearance of Charles Burnett's KILLER OF SHEEP, a slice of DeSica-style African-American neo-realism unseen now for more than 30 years) - GEORGE WASHINGTON is an independent film, with a tiny theatrical release, and was made on a tiny budget, though Green makes extremely good use of the budget he had to work with.

Green's love for allowing his actors' personalities room to express themselves should also serve him well in the future. Characters here are allowed to dream and imagine, and there are moments when this film soars with a shimmering expressiveness - brought down to earth with a few well-placed dramatic turns, but still rather magical overall.

I would add a note concerning both the cinematography, and Green's use of dialogue here: parts of my childhood were spent in neighborhoods in Charlotte (a city of 600,000+ people) that look VERY much like what I saw in GEORGE WASHINGTON, and recall occasions of running around some grimy neighborhoods with other friends engaging in plenty of the kinds of daydreaminess that occupies the characters here, even when those characters (and you: the viewer) must also deal with the intrusions of ugly or unpleasant realities. Green nailed something here that almost no one else seems to get: even the grimiest places can occasionally startle with unexpected charm, and even the most impoverished people can occasionally remind one of just how vast and playful the human imagination can be. Qualities in this film that first seem like impressionistic wooziness are in fact more real than many critics would seem to be able to fathom.

The similarities with Terrence Malick and Charles Burnett are obvious; but sparseness and the unobtrusive ability to see the complexity and dignity within characters also favorably recalls some Yasujiro Ozu, Eric Rohmer and Italian neo-realism, and if Green isn't yet their equal, he's still well ahead most of his indie film contemporaries.

-David Alston

5 out of 5 stars I hope you live forever........2006-07-05

David Gordon Green is a master of his trade. While some will argue that George Washington does not depict the best that Green has to offer, I believe that it is a great opening to a new chapter of modern filmmaking. For George Washington, Green has borrowed techniques that have made such directors as Larry Clark, Harmony Korine, and Terrence Malick infamous in the film community, and transformed them into his very own. George Washington is a perfect example of this. With beautiful narration, exquisite background, and fresh faces that deliver dialogue worthy of both Oscar and recognition, Green gives us a chilling tale that is fraught with realism, desperation, and horror. What immediately pulled me in to this film were the still-shots that defined the culture of the town. These young children are experiencing everything that we have ever encountered in our lives up to that breaking moment of insanity. We are pulled in to the story and direction because Green is able to bring truth to his "fictional" tale. While we all know that this is just another "story", Green send goosebumps down our spine with his passion of realism. For a majority of this film, I found myself questioning the "fictionalization" of this film. What obviously were moments created by the imagination transformed into those that you could see on the streets of small town North Carolina.

An element that added to the realism of the background and story were the characters. Green padded his directorial debut with unknowns and was able to command more emotion and dedication than you could see in anything "big-budget" Hollywood. While it was obvious that he was working with child actors (i.e., some delivery was slow, some direction seemed choppy, and for one scene characterization seemed weak), he overcomes the typical stereotypes and brings the best of his imaginary world and that of the children into this film. I loved that when Buddy went mission that Nasia thought that it was because he was still in love with her and could not cope with the emotion. It seemed like a cheap moment of dialogue, but it made complete and utter sense in this film. The actor that played George, Donald Holden, was phenomenal. He brought that sad hero to the surface and we, as audience members, found ourselves rooting for him from the beginning. He was simple, in fact, one could say that was a technique that Green employed to be successful with George Washington, he kept things simple. What made George Washington different than Korine's Gummo is that Green doesn't emphasize the poverty level. While he makes it clear with the surroundings and home-life of George, he doesn't throw it in our faces as a "shock" tactic like Korine does. Not that there is anything wrong with Korine's tactics, I just thought that Green's approach was more subtle. I also draw references to M. Night Shyamalan's vastly underrated Unbreakable due to the subject matter. George Washington is the story about finding heroes in the most unlikely of places. It is the story of how tragedy births the heroes of our lives, and while we should never disregard the tragedy, it does bring to light those that want to change. Unbreakable, released the same year as George Washington, implies the same. One could find a great research topic by comparing these two films side by side.

I think I may have zigzagged a bit in that last paragraph, but it just demonstrates my excitement for this film. This is my second time watching George Washington and I think it gets better and better with each viewing. Criterion was correct to add it to their collection of ever-growing films. This is a film about childhood. Rarely in film is it explored with such darkness and honesty. Lately, there have been more films that surround itself around the topic (Chumbscubber, Mean Creek), but for 2000 this was a pivotal film. I was engulfed by the reaction that Green pulled from the different characters. Already I have spoken about George's transformation, but I also loved the insecurity that Vernon began feeling and the truth that Sonya finally saw about her future. It is sad, but extremely real. This film reminded me of a modern Stand By Me.

I must end with saying that this is not a film for everyone. If you are not a fan of some of the directors that I have mentioned above, than you may not enjoy George Washington. It is slow, simple, and developed. Green takes images and makes the visuals actually work for him instead of fighting against it. The narration could be annoying for some, but for me it completed this film. I would have enjoyed more time spent with George's Aunt and Uncle due to so much is unknown about them, but that is what makes Green's work superb. I liked this film. For me, it is a prime example of true American filmmaking. It takes us back to the roots of what cinema should be about. George Washington takes us away from the explosions, the CGI, and the overpaid actors while delivering to us a story that should have shaken the Oscar tree. Criterion was correct to release this film in their collection, and it is correct for you to add it to yours. This is David Gordon Green at his finest!

Grade: ***** out of *****

4 out of 5 stars The ghetto as a poem. A lingering portrait. .......2006-01-24

I'd imagine that if Mark Twain, Robert Frost, or Walt Whitman were still alive, they might appreciate George Washington as a film personified through a poem. Maybe not, but something tells me that David Gordon Greer, the director/writer of this film, comes from the same mold as the aforementioned individuals.

In it, we have five young friends - four black, one white - living among the ruins of an impoverished, yet somehow beautiful, ghetto landscape. When one of them meets accidental disaster, the others are left to struggle with guilt. One of the ways they do is through escapism. For one of them, he envisions himself as a superhero who can read God's mind, thus enabling him the power to predict who will die and who will live. Meanwhile, two of his friends take a path of self-destruction while the third watches the climatic events unfold with stoic restlessness.

I was amazed at how well this film was made. The characters, particularly "George", seem almost ethereal. When I saw the film, it didn't feel like a fictional movie. It felt like some otherwordly documentary focused on a place that most of us would otherwise ignore at all costs. Truly, David G. Greer has captured something splendid here, and has managed to turn the "ghetto" into a place of childhood dreams, both realized and dreamt. One of the top three films I've seen this year.

4.5 out of 5.

3 out of 5 stars Considerable Talent on Display Here.......2005-12-27

I often find the 5 star rating system doesn't leave enough room for films that sit somewhere in between. I'm giving this three stars because it's not really up to the level of many films that I gave four stars to. On the other hand, I'm not saying I didn't like it or that I don't think the director has potential for greatness. The down side for me is that I don't think story satisfies as a story. I don't, at the end of it, know what it was about in terms of narrative theme, etc. I wish I could make more sense of that side of things.

On the other hand, the filmaking is great. The mood, characters and dialogue, the cinematography, the originality. I love it that it's a truly southern film. And a film starring young black actors in something that's not about race, crime or drugs? That's also a wonderful aspect of this film. It's a true original. Flawed in ways that merit note, but it's also a lot more worthy of our attention than most Hollywood fare. So this is one three star movie that I actually recommend highly - if original, independent filmaking is of interest to you.

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