Investigation of a Flame explained

Investigation of a Flame
Director:Lynne Sachs
Cinematography:Lynne Sachs
Benjamin P. Speth
Editing:Lynne Sachs
Production Companies:-->
Distributors:-->
Runtime:43 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Investigation of a Flame is a 2001 documentary by Lynne Sachs about the Catonsville Nine, nine Catholic activists who became known for their May 17, 1968 nonviolent act of civil disobedience in burning draft files to protest the Vietnam War.[1]

The 45 minute film includes interviews with six members of the pioneers from the 1968 expression, including Daniel and Philip Berrigan, John Hogan, Thomas Lewis, and married couple Marjorie and Tom Melville. The film also includes commentary by historian Howard Zinn.

Reviews

Francis X. Clines of The New York Times described the film as "a documentary about the protest events that made Catonsville, Maryland, an unpretentious suburb on the cusp of Baltimore, a flash point for citizens' resistance at the height of the war. ... Sachs found assorted characters still firm to fiery on the topic. She came to admire the consistency of the mutual antagonists in an argument that still rages (today)."[1] Michael O'Sullivan of The Washington Post wrote that Sachs "uses a mosaic technique and seemingly random shots of plants and houses to create a moody, subjective portrait of an era as much as a group of people."[2] Molly Marsh of Sojourners magazine called the film "wonderfully intimate; Sachs brings the camera within inches of her subjects' faces, capturing their thoughtful reminisces and personal regrets.[3] Fred Camper of the Chicago Reader called it a "poetic essay" with "no omniscient narrator talking down to the viewer ... while "images like a newspaper going in and out of focus remind us that shifting contexts alter our understanding of complex events."[4]

Lee Gardner of the Baltimore City Paper wrote that "Sachs cannily avoids the usual documentary dance of talking heads and file footage by interspersing impressionistic shots. (The film) provides a potent reminder that some Americans are willing to pay a heavy price to promote peace."[5]

Awards

External links

Notes and References

  1. Francis X. Clines, "Catonsville Journal; Keeping Alive the Spirit of Vietnam War Protest", The New York Times, May 3, 2001.
  2. Michael O'Sullivan, "Experimental Cinema At the Corcoran", The Washington Post, January 4, 2002.
  3. Molly Marsh, "Worth noting. (Investigation of a Flame: a Documentary Portrait of the Catonsville Nine)(Movie Review)" Sojourners, May 1, 2003
  4. Fred Camper, Review of Investigation of a Flame, Chicago Reader (accessed 2012-01-07).
  5. http://iof.lynnesachs.com/content.php?sec=press "Press & Reviews"