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DVD : Strange CultureIn association with Amazon.comstarring: Peter Coyote, Tilda Swinton, Thomas Jay Ryan, Josh Kornbluth, Steve Kurtz directed by: Lynn Hershman Leeson List Price: $26.95 Amazon.com's Price: $24.49 You Save: $2.46 ( 9%)Prices subject to change. Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: DVD Brand: NEW VIDEO GROUP INC EAN: 0767685108796 Format: Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Label: DOCURAMA Manufacturer: DOCURAMA Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: DOCURAMA Region Code: 1 Release Date: March 25, 2008 Running Time: 75 minutes Studio: DOCURAMA Theatrical Release Date: 2006 Sales Rank: 74044 MPN: NVGD108791D Related Items:
Editorial Review: Product Description: In this moving and wildly innovative film, director Lynn Hershman Leeson tells the terrifying story of how one man's personal tragedy turns into persecution by a paranoid and overzealous government. Art professor Steve Kurtz's nightmare began on May 11, 2004, when he awoke to find his wife Hope dead of a heart attack. Paramedics responding to his 911 call, suspicious of petri dishes and scientific paraphenalia in his house (materials for an art project on genetically modified food) contacted the FBI, and soon his world was turned upside down. Only hours after his wife s tragic death he was suddenly a murder suspect, an accused bioterrorist, and a pariah to all but his closest friends. Told through a unique blend of interviews, documentary footage, and reconstructed scenes starring Tilda Swinton, Thomas Jay Ryan, and Peter Coyote, Hershman s critically-acclaimed film is a sophisticated, look at how the traumatic events of 9/11 altered American society and undermined its long-held values. Extras on the DVD include: Theatrical Trailer, Filmmaker Interviews, Outtakes and Filmmaker Biography. Amazon.com: Though Lynn Hershman Leeson’s third feature tackles weighty issues like national security and privacy rights, love plays an equal part in the picture. Three years after 9/11, Buffalo-based artist Hope Kurtz (played by Oscar winner Tilda Swinton, Michael Clayton), dies from a heart attack. Her husband of 27 years, Steve (Henry Fool's Thomas Jay Ryan), yearns to mourn, but authorities notice bacteria-filled Petri dishes around their house and take him in for questioning (the Kurtz's subject was genetically modified food). Next, the FBI confiscates his computers, his cat--even his wife's body--before charging him and colleague Robert Ferrell (Peter Coyote) with bioterrorist intentions, culminating in indictments for mail and wire fraud. As in Hershman Leeson's previous projects with Swinton, Conceiving Ada and Teknolust, science and art co-mingle. This time, though, she merges interviews, dramatic recreations, and Kurtz himself, which initially proves distracting--he looks nothing like Ryan--but his first-person testimony adds weight to the actor's believable performance. Though the director grapples with big ideas, she never loses sight of the people behind them. Her intentionally one-sided portrait of an insular art world flirts with pretension, but for those truly concerned about the issues at hand--and the humans affected by them--Strange Culture will surely break a few hearts. At the time of filming, Kurtz's case remained unresolved, but the opening title conveys both optimism and respect: "This film is dedicated to Hope." Extras include an interview with the subject and a comprehensive profile of the filmmaker. --Kathleen C. Fennessy Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - as the title reads...STRANGENo doubt a good review of what can happen in our paranoid times. BUT, it takes a great deal of patience to stay with this film. Also the switching back and forth from the film lead and the actual man involved in this story can be confusing. I am afraid after a half hour I found myself numbed by the prologue and turned the film off. Rating: - Must see film...especially nowAt a time when the country stands at a crossroads, the more information we have, the better. When I watched this movie, I took notes with the hopes of doing a piece about it as a freelance writer. Editors thought the story had been sufficiently told. Ironically, I pitched it the week that CIA tapes mysteriously disappeared. One of the quotes from the movie is "Freedom is knowledge." If we don't educate ourselves about what is happening in our country, we are doomed. Luckily, ... Read More Rating: - artistic freedom and political urgencyStrange Culture I've seen this docudrama twice now. It offers a penetrating yet quite understated commentary on the emergence of what author Bertram Gross once described as "friendly fascism" - not the jackboots, uniforms and screeching rhetoric, but our 'friendly protection' from terrorism, and at the same time our 'protection' from lingering anxieties concerning genetically modified foods. You wouldn't think all this would come together in a single FBI case, currently pending. But it has. In Buffalo, ... Read More Rating: - most moving film I've seen so farI watched this film on IFC, and immediately ordered a copy. I plan on showing this movie in all ART classes and CRIMINAL JUSTICE classes at my university. This documentary tears the roof off our 'friendly loving' government and shows the reality of the situation. We're all 100% guilty until proven innocent. Even then, being proven innocent means nothing, just that they'll try to get you on a different more BS charge! Buy it! Watch it! Join the mailing list- This is happening right now, and YOU can ... Read More Rating: - A "MUST" BUY.Strange Culture is, without a doubt, THE most important film about the horrendous, idiotic, policies of the current administration. The film chronicles the nightmare that is possible when an artist critiques our culture with thought and pointed commentary. On the other hand...essentially, this is a film about what FREEDOM means...FOR ALL OF US...not just artists...buy it...it will remind you of what can happen when politicians and their errant political power go "unchecked." Browse for similar items by category:
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