Actress (2014 film) explained

Actress (2014 film)
Director:Robert Greene
Producer:Douglas Tirola
Distributor:The Cinema Guild
Runtime:88 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Actress is a 2014 American documentary film about actress Brandy Burre, directed, edited and photographed by Robert Greene. The film was produced by Douglas Tirola and Susan Bedusa, and is a 4th Row Films and Prewar Cinema production. It was distributed by The Cinema Guild.

Synopsis

Actress is a documentary about Brandy Burre, most known for her recurring role as Theresa D’Agostino on HBO's The Wire[1] as she attempts to return to her acting career after abandoning it to concentrate on raising a family.

Set in suburban Beacon, New York, Burre struggles with duties and relationships in her domestic life. During the film, she pursues re-entering her former profession by meeting old contacts in the industry and rebuilding herself while juggling motherhood and her personal life.

Actress has been recognized for its use of poetic, more directed techniques and mise-en-scène, a tactic that is something of an anomaly in documentaries.[2] Poetic aspects were used mostly to represent Burre's crumbling emotional state. Greene has said that there was a performance to all of Burre's behavior.[3] His use of “composed indie-film moments,” seen in the consciously lit, stage-like opening scene, slow motion shots, and collaboration with Burre, allowed her to become more than just a subject. This enabled the actress to “explore her own authenticity” in a way that became a very cathartic experience for her.[4] Seeing her dismantling personal life told in present tense, Burre performs in roles as a mother and caregiver, as well as an actress pursuing a career, and a woman in romantic turmoil with her longtime partner and father of her children.

Greene has called Burre's performance “fragile and open,” while at other points “opaque and hard,” and said that her “gestures of fragility to me are more devastating to me than watching someone totally unaware of what she’s doing. She’s authentically in pain, but she’s also demonstrating pain very consciously and dramatically. The combination of the real and the display is mind boggling to me. You don’t know where one begins and the other ends.”[5]

Critical reception

The film premiered at True/False Film Festival in Columbia, MO on February 27, 2014.[6] Its theatrical release was on April 26, 2014 at Art of the Real at Lincoln Center, New York, NY.[7]

It has been well-received critically, praised for blurring the line between fiction and non-fiction,[8] and has been called, "a story with universal appeal rendered in intimate flourishes,"[9] and, “beguiling, provocative and formally exciting."[10]

Actress was nominated for a Gotham Award for Best Documentary,[11] named, "best storytelling in a documentary feature," at the Nantucket Film Festival.[12] Boston Globe’s Peter Keough called Actress a film that "underscores the inextricability of real life and make-believe... combining artifice with cinema vérité," and "explores where the line between performance and genuine behavior meet and blur."[13]

In a 2019 ranking, New York magazine's Vulture website listed Actress as the 11th best film of the entire 2010s, making it the highest-ranked documentary in the list. Critic Bilge Ebiri wrote, "In its full-blooded, compassionate, complex portrait of its subject, it’s the rare documentary that achieves the emotional breadth of a great novel."[14]

Awards

CPH:DOX (2014)

Cinema Eye Honors Awards, US (2015)

Gotham Awards (2014)

Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival (2014)

Indiewire Critics’ Poll (2014)

Notes and References

  1. "The Wire." IMDb.
  2. Kohn, Eric. "True/False Review: Robert Greene's Mesmerizing 'Actress' Features a Disgruntled Actress-Turned-Housewife Facing Life After 'The Wire'" Indiewire. February 27, 2014.
  3. Brooks, Brian. "‘Actress’ Director Robert Greene Talks Performance, Transition, and Breaking Rules." ‘Actress’ Director Robert Greene Talks Performance, Transition, and Breaking Rules. November 8, 2014.
  4. Brooks, Brian. "‘Actress’ Director Robert Greene Talks Performance, Transition, and Breaking Rules." ‘Actress’ Director Robert Greene Talks Performance, Transition, and Breaking Rules. November 8, 2014.
  5. Cohn, Pamela. "Bomb." BOMB Magazine — Robert Greene by Pamela Cohn. November 4, 2014.
  6. True/False Film Festival 2014.
  7. "Art of the Real 2014." Film Society Lincoln Center. Art of the Real 2014.
  8. Brody, Richard. "Nothing Is Real." New Yorker, April 14, 2014.
  9. Kohn, Eric. "True/False Review: Robert Greene's Mesmerizing 'Actress' Features a Disgruntled Actress-Turned-Housewife Facing Life After 'The Wire'" Indiewire. February 27, 2014.
  10. Bernstein, Paula. "Exclusive: Cinema Guild Acquires Robert Greene's Award-Winning 'Actress'" Indiewire. June 20, 2014.
  11. The Gotham Independent Film Awards. Award Nominees.
  12. Segal, Tatiana. "Nantucket Film Fest: Richard Linklater's 'Boyhood' Among Winners." The Hollywood Reporter. June 29, 2014.
  13. Keough, Peter. "Brandy Burre Brings Her Work Home, in ‘Actress’ - The Boston Globe." Boston Globe. February 25, 2015.
  14. Web site: Every Movie of the 2010s, Ranked . December 11, 2019 . Vulture.com.