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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
GUERRILLA: The Taking of
Patty Hearst (Robert Stone)
Magnolia Pictures
Guerilla looks like an episode of Streets of
San Francisco meets Dragnet, meets any revolutionary-era
Berkeley documentary you can get your hands on.
Of course, one could suppose, it has to, since
it’s a cult crime documentary based in 70’s
Berkeley. But could nothing have been done to
freshen it up?
Perhaps not. The modern soundtrack feels out
of place, since the film doesn’t attempt
to correlate any of the subject matter with the
modern social climate. And, the tweaked out, arty
montage toward the end is just bizarrely unnecessary
(though remarkable creepy).
Of course we know that Patty Hearst was the daughter
of newspaper tycoon, Wm. Randolph Hearst, and
was abducted by the anti-war, pseudo-communist
Simbianese Liberation Army in 1974. Patty seemingly
succumbed to the ideals of the S.L.A. over time,
and ended up assisting them in a robbery as well
as fighting for all their causes under her pseudonym,
Tania… That is, until she was arrested,
when she declared that she had been suffering
from Stockholm syndrome, and actually wanted nothing
to do with the crazy old S.L.A.
Guerrilla goes into detail with candid and privileged
interviews that dominate the content of the film,
along with archival news reels and surveillance
footage.
If you already know the brunt of this story,
and have never explored the deeper questions and
details, you may be bored by this film, as it
doesn’t exactly offer much new insight to
dispel the inherent historical conjecture; however,
if you’re fascinated by the Hearst story,
the film does maintain a depth and a focus that
refreshingly separates it from every other documentary
about that period in American history.
In other words, if you’ve seen Cecil B.
Demented (co-starring Patty Hearst, incidentally)
and thought it was a good story, but a little
too modern for you, then Guerilla is your material.
It’s rather unfortunate that even the current
interviews in Guerrilla retain too much of that
70’s, dated look. It’s a worth-while
watch, but painfully so, with all the aesthetics
of a 70’s driver’s education course
film strip. Some working modern reference would
have saved this.
GUERRILLA: The Taking of Patty Hearst
opens January 14th at Starz Film Center.
www.guerrillathemovie.com
Jef Hoskins January 14, 2005
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