Event detail
Swoon
Film - Feature | September 28 | 8 p.m. | Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
The only three-time winner of Sundances cinematography award, renowned cinematographer Ellen Kuras (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind; Summer of Sam) made her fiction debut with Tom Kalins atmospheric black-and-white 1992 revisiting of the notorious 1924 Leopold and Loeb murder case, which was also the basis for Hitchcocks Rope. Wealthy, intellectual, Jewish, and gay, Leopold and Loeb abducted and murdered a fourteen-year-old boy, ostensibly to demonstrate their superiority over others; their trial was the sensation of the decade. This stylish and provocative film remains one of the best examples of the New Queer Cinema and of US independent filmmaking in the 90s (Marc Siegel, Berlinale Forum).
afox@berkeley.edu, 5106420365