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145 A Vision of Watts Still Frozen in Time Mary McNamara/2007 Published in Los Angeles Times, April 1, 2007. Reprinted by permission. Most student films, mercifully, do not get theatrical distribution. Certainly not thirty years after they were shot or with the combined efforts of crack film preservationists and a most persistent specialty film distributor . But Killer of Sheep, which will open Friday at the Nuart, is not an ordinary film. The UCLA film-school thesis project of Charles Burnett (To Sleep with Anger, The Glass Shield) is instead a cinematic tone poem, an elegy, perhaps , or an ode to a certain time and place. Set in Watts during the midseventies , Killer of Sheep refers to Stan, the main character, a husband and father trapped by his job in a slaughterhouse. There is a loosely constructed plot, but the film focuses on the quiet beauty of the mundane : a group of kids throwing rocks in a train yard, a young woman announcing her pregnancy, a couple dancing in their living room. The message that emerges—life is difficult but lovely just the same—is as understated as it is heroic, and in a sense, applies to the man who made the film. Shot on 16mm film, using mostly non-actors—friends and neighbors and kids—Killer of Sheep was Burnett’s response to the era’s blaxploitation films, his attempt to show life as it really was for many black families. “Hollywood, I don’t think, tries to portray things realistically,” he says. “When they make movies about the community, you only see drug movies or violence. That perception of black people,” he adds, “still exists.” He went into Watts and used regular people rather than actors, he says, because he wanted to demystify filmmaking for members of his neighborhood. “When I was growing up,” he says, “the idea of becom- 146 charles burnett: inter views ing a cinematographer was like going to the moon. Kids came up to us, they didn’t even know what the camera was. Spike [Lee] has done a great job since then. He’s pretty much a household name.” Burnett, however, is not, unless your household includes one or more dedicated cinephiles. Then his name evokes reverence; bring up Killer of Sheep and reverence turns to awe. Earning high marks With its almost palpable tenderness and artistic imagery, the film became a film-school favorite, used in classes as an example of an exemplary student film and making the festival rounds until it won an award in Berlin four years after it was made. The Library of Congress chose it as one of the first fifty films on the National Film Registry, and the National Society of Film Critics selected it as one of the “100 Essential Films” of all time. Meanwhile, the world changed, not only in Watts but in the film industry , where film school became too often a mere steppingstone to the studios and independent film took on a brand. But Burnett remained as he was—devoted to telling stories from real life. To Sleep with Anger (1990) considered the impact a sweet-talking con man has on a family, The Glass Shield (1994), often cited as a precursor to the more over-thetop Training Day, takes on fear and racism in the Los Angeles Police Department. Burnett, a soft-spoken man who looks years younger than his age (sixty), is best known in the film community as a man of reserve and integrity. “Charles is often called the best black American director,” says Ross Lipman, a film preservationist at UCLA. “I think he is simply one of the best American directors, and Killer of Sheep is one of the best American films ever.” Lipman is the man behind the film’s theatrical release. Seven years ago, he was part of a team that received a Sundance grant to restore eight films, including Killer of Sheep. Although the film reels were deteriorating , Lipman and his colleagues were able to painstakingly pull out the quality of the original and blow it up to 35mm. Lipman was so impressed with the finished product that he called Dennis Doros at Milestone Films. But quality is not the only reason student films are not distributed theatrically—Burnett had used a lot of music in his film, and none of it had been through the licensing chan- [3.141.8.247] Project MUSE (2024-04-26 18:09 GMT) mary mcnamara / 2007 147 nels. It...

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