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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
Colfax Avenue: SOUL OF A
CITY (Michael Jacobs and Daniel Silverstein)
It was four or five years ago when I saw the
cover of the Faithless CD, Sunday 8pm, which featured
the marquee of the BlueBird, the inspiration for
their album’s title. I remember looking
at that and wondering what the place was like,
its history, what it was and what it had become.
Little did I know at the time that it was located
in Denver, and that years later, I would live
in walking distance of the venue, in a neighborhood
brimming over with cultural diversity.
Colfax Avenue educates us and answers
some of my questions while raising more in the
process. Little did I know that Colfax was once
a fancy boulevard, lined with the homes of the
wealthier Denverites of the time. Progress and
I-70 changed the look and heart beat of the longest
commercial street in the nation, and with it came
a rush of art, ideas, activism and yes, the indigent.
Local filmmakers Michael Jacobs and Daniel Silverstein
have not only proven themselves with the production
and their approach to chronicling the life that
is Colfax, but with the compelling interviews
with the people of its streets.
There’s the painter Steve Wilson and the
publisher and poet Ed Ward who talk of the beatnik
days. They tell us of the Ogden Bookstore where
the hooker and junkies, painters and poets all
came together, or how a stranger would open the
door in searching of what was “happening.”
Yes, the famous beat poets Neil Cassidy and Jack
Kerouac were also Denver residents. But it was
the homegrown variety that continued to make a
difference in the city’s vibe.
The present day shows us plans to clean up the
neighborhood, to make it nice and pretty like
LoDo, removing the people and the colors that
make it one of Denver’s last funky neighborhoods.
The questions arise on how the city will support
its people, those that live on the streets or
struggle to make it day by day in no-win situations.
Colfax Avenue is a testament to Colorado’s
growing filmmaking talent and a must see for anyone
who lives here, and even those that don’t.
It’s about real life in a city dealing with
growth, how this affects its people, and how others
are struggling to keep the boulevard from becoming
a gentrified street, Anytown USA.
The movie's first screening a few weeks ago sold
out. For those that missed it, another screening
will take place at our holiday event at Forest
Room 5 Sunday, December 19.
www.colfaxthemovie.com
-Kim Owens, November 19, 2004 |