Benjamin Smoke (2000)

Benjamin Smoke (2000)


  • Release Date: 07/21/2000
  • Rating: Not Yet Rated
  • Runtime: 1 hr 20 mins
  • Genre: Music
  • Director: Jem Cohen
  • Cast: Not Yet Available


What Critics Say



A bold, affirming look at one man's offbeat vision, alternately touching and humorous.



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Starring Benjamin, Patti Smith, Tim Campion, Brian Halloran and Coleman Lewis.
Directed and produced by Jem Cohen and Peter Sillen. Released by Cowboy Booking.
es: Brockovich is a torrent of profanity.

'Erin Brockovich'

Julia Roberts: Erin Brockovich

Albert Finney: Ed Masry

Aaron Eckhart: George

Marg Helgenberger: Donna Jensen

Cherry Jones: Pamela Duncan

Peter Coyote: Kurt Potter

Universal Pictures and Columbia Pictures present a Jersey Films production. Director Steven Soderbergh. Producers Danny DeVito, Michael Shamberg, Stacey Sher. Written by Susannah Grant. Executive producers John Hardy, Carla Santos Shamberg. Cinematographer Ed Lachman. Editor Anne V. Coates. Production design Philip Messina. Music Thomas Newman. Costumes Jeffrey Kurland. Art director Christa Munro. Set decorator Kristen Toscano Messina. Running time: 2 hours, 11 minutes.
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By Mauricio Minotta

Story


Robert "Benjamin" Dickerson, longtime figure on Atlanta's underground music scene, blended punk rock, country and blues as frontman for Smoke and other bands. Filmmakers Jem Cohen and Peter Sillen chronicle the last nine years of his life, from Smoke's emotionally charged performances and his work with idol Patti Smith to his 1999 death from AIDS.
Acting
Benjamin quietly commands attention in a series of intimate, poignant and remarkably open interviews, discussing his childhood as a country boy in drag, his punk-rock beginnings, life as a self-confessed speed freak and his thoughts on death and dying. Through it all, a quirky, ironic sense of humor shows through ("I just love cops at shows"). In candid shots, he serves as a window into the underground music scene and as an observer of life in the shadow of Cabbagetown's long-shuttered cotton mills, where "little kids ... go to jail really young, whose parents all do inhalants."
Direction
The movie opens with a beautifully composed black and white montage set to Benjamin's distinctly Southern rasp. The rest of the 80-minute docupic delivers on the sensory expectations that the opening sets up, interleaving interviews, candid moments and environmental shots to develop an intimate portrait of the subject. However, it is a portrait so alluring that one leaves with only the vaguest sense of the events and chronology behind the film.

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