Filmjack3 wrote on IMDB:
I was glad I saw Edge of Outside, and I know if I was just starting to
become a full on film-buff it would be very helpful in knowing which
directors who not only worked independently of the studio system, but
those who were able to be individualistic while still being in some
sort of system nonetheless. As someone who knows almost all the
filmmakers talked about or interviewed here, however, it's nothing new.
Of course it's neat to hear about the early silent independents, like
DW Griffith and Stroheim and Keaton, and it's always fine to hear the
gushing over Cassavetes great body of work. But it's both a shame and a
given that it would be only an hour long to cover such subject matter.
It's for turner classic movies, so it's not like a PBS documentary
special in its way of almost going too long into getting into subject
matter. [ show more ]
So at only an hour, the one assembling the footage and interviews here
probably had TOO much to work with, and thus had to whittle down to the
essentials- the early silents I mentioned, plus Orson Welles,
Cassavetes, Sam Fuller, Tarantino, Roger Corman, David Lynch, the
influence of French & Italian cinema, and a few others amid the crowd
(one of them the near forgotten Henry Jaglom). For what it's worth, the
interviews- particularly by Scorsese, Bogdanovich, and at least one of
the historians- are interesting. Though what is utilized is really just
a brief rundown that could have gone more in-depth into each decade and
each wave of films and how independents still struggle amid the biggest
corporate landscape imaginable for filmmakers today. It's like a brief
synopsis, though one that is still appreciated if for nothing else
giving glimpses of great and struggling careers to those who may not
know much about the likes of Fuller or Cassavetes or the real struggles
of Welles. [ show less ]
Written on IMDB a long time ago.