Belfast, Maine is a film about ordinary experience in a beautiful old New England port city. It is a portrait of daily life with particular emphasis on the work and the cultural life of the community. Among the activities shown in the film are the work of lobstermen, tug-boat operators, factory workers, shop owners, city counselors, doctors, judges, policemen, teachers, social workers, nurses and ministers. Cultural activities include choir rehearsal, dance class, music lessons and theatre production. –Zipporah Films
Documentarian Frederick Wiseman has been noted for his ability to capture the nuances of life in American institutions such as prisons, hospitals, welfare offices, and high schools. He started out in 1963 by producing a fictional feature film, The Cool World, an examination of the lives of Harlem teenagers. In the beginning, Wiseman was a staunch social reformist, and his films were calls for change. Titicut Follies, his first documentary, is an exposé of life in a prison for the criminally insane in Bridgewater, MA. It was controversial and left Wiseman with the reputation of being a muckraker. His four subsequent documentaries were all exposés of other tax-supported institutions designed to show the ineffectiveness of the bureaucracy that not only threatens to destroy them, but also dehumanizes the people they were meant to serve. Wiseman toned down his message and began focusing more on American culture to point out the symbolism of daily activities in his film Primate (1974). In… read more
Thirteen years after it was made and the film plays out like the delayed death of the sun, in Barthes' words, "not necessarily what is no longer, but only and for certain what has been." Wiseman's authorial non-stance looks beyond institutions into the world at large, just as desperate as the asylum and the ghetto, but without hope of reform. Codes of illness and dying, the trapped wolf whimpering for its execution.
This is the kind of film that reminds me why I am a filmmaker every time I watch it.
I don't want to speak too soon, but this might possibly be the greatest film I've ever seen. Savvy