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Audience of One
The IllusionistsIndependent Film Festival of Boston 2007[25 May 2007] by Jake MeaneyIndependent Film Festival of Boston 2007 Audience of One (dir. Mike Jacobs)
Citing unlimited funding from German-based financiers, Gozowsky hauls his congregation and a few amateur actors off to Italy for initial shooting in a seaside village, but it’s clear from the get-go that the production will devolve into a complete fiasco. Which it promptly does, in grandiose fashion, as Mike Jacobs’ entertainingly documents in Audience of One. Claiming nothing but complete success in Italy, despite only getting two takes shot over the course of a few weeks of shooting, Gozowsky relocates back to San Francisco and installs himself in the largest film studio in the city. Here things deteriorate exponentially; the production become hopelessly mired in confused rewrites, there are defections by the only non-church members involved, and there’s the escalating paranoia of Gozowsky himself (he is convinced that all of Hollywood is descending upon him to steal his sure-fire hit).
![]() Audience of One It’s easy to dismiss Gozowsky has a monomaniacal blowhard who’s a few sandwiches short of the picnic; it’s easy to laugh at the lunacy of his plan from global cinematic dominance; it’s easy to mock the fervor of his followers. And yet there’s something not a little bit refreshing about his outrageous brauva, his delusions of epic grandeur, his indefatigable enthusiasm, his tenacity in the face of reason. Perhaps I admire him for resembling, in some small way, my own favorite director, the also seemingly cracked and loony Werner Herzog. And though it’ll never get made, I admit I’m a little disappointed we’ll never get to see the $200 million space opera version of Joseph. Let’s pray for a miracle.
![]() Monster Camp
Monster Camp (dir. Cullen Hoback)
Though no overarching theme emerges during the loose collection of interviews and shots of the “action”, Monster Camp does touch upon some interesting points about the intersection of fantasy and reality in these peoples lives. A few of them articulate how “LARPing” (live action role playing) is a way to channel the sense of imagination and wonder of childhood that has become such a rarity in the world we live in, and indeed, there is something childlike in the way this all operates. It’s clearly evident, from their devotion and enthusiasm, that these people are having Fun with a capital “F”. Of course, the flipside, for many, but not all, is that LARPing can easily become a substitute for reality, a chance to withdraw completely from the world, a way to eschew any sort of responsibility. It’s not dangerous, per se, but it’s definitely not healthy.
![]() Monster Camp
Independent Film Festival of Boston 2007
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