Cheree Franco

Born of a Mississippi heatwave, Cheree Franco set off for cooler lands as soon as she got that driver’s permit--at the ripe age of 15, in a certain state. She’s been a perpetual explorer since, bouncing from coast to coast and continent to continent. An arts & culture journalism program brought her to New York, where she is busy being a writer (a righter!) and cultivating her great appreciation for people who make things and the things that they make.
Tagged in: Poster Art , Music , Film
Cheree Franco
Posted by: Cheree Franco

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So I watched the documentary American Artifact: the Rise of the American Rock Poster (as yet unreleased on DVD) at a special screening at Mississippi State University Thursday night. Merle Becker, our director-cum-narrator, apparently quit some staid, high-paid 9-5 to travel the country talking to poster artists. In itself, this requires slight suspension of disbelief, but when she made the inflated claim that she was unaware of what she terms “the rock poster art movement” until roughly five years ago, my bullshit trigger immediately tensed; not optional audience sentiment at the start of an amatuerish documentary. American Artifact is mostly talking heads and posters that flash too quickly for real visual contemplation, betraying Becker's background as the made-for-TV editor and producer that she's been (often for MTV...I know it's Industry, but come on, did she really not know about rock posters?) But the film serves its purpose as a crash course in the poster art that accompanied the dawn of rock and roll and experienced a revival alongside the digital era’s disdain for handmade commercial illustration. It even manages to be entertaining, thanks to the gregariousness, passion and wit of the involved artists (Stanley Mouse, Rick Griffin, Frank Kozik, COOP and Lindsey Kuhn to name a few). These guys are almost charismatic enough to rescue the film from its warm and fuzzy (and altogether viewer-alienating) personal journey narration and (always a bad idea) re-enaction scenes. With the exception of some amazing MC-5 concert shots, American Artifact also suffers from a lack of raw vintage footage or even stills—show footage, backstage footage, footage of the artists doing their thing—and the editing is often a cut-and-paste cheese-fest. In Becker’s defense, this footage may not even exist, and the outtakes during the credits are pretty fun. But in the hands of a more skillful filmmaker or a person intimately familiar with the material or the “community” (buzzword alert) being covered, this could have been a great documentary. Instead, it comes across like the Cliff Notes version of Paul Grushkin & Dennis King’s 2004 book Art of Modern Rock: the Poster Explosion, and I was the fifteen year old geek that devoured Crime and Punishment. So for me, the film was a disappointment—worth seeing, sure, but not worth seeing more than once.

Comments (3)Add Comment
JBforth
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written by Los Angeles Writing, November 16, 2009
hmmm maybe I should skip this one
Cheree Franco
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written by Cheree Franco, November 16, 2009
the artist jason eppink once told me about this thing he has, this syndrome if you will. he calls it FOMO (fear of missing out), and it's quite paralyzing because while he's doing one thing, he's always worried about all the other things going on, all the things he could be doing, all the things he's missing. i think this is the kind of movie that would drive a FOMO sufferer to tear out massive chunks of hair, not because it's completely painful, just because it's possibly not worth it...at the least, it would be a stressful viewing experience. so Los Angeles Writing, are you a FOMO sufferer? if so, i think you've made the right decision smilies/smiley.gif
John
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written by John, December 04, 2009
i saw this at the new york premiere, and thought it was great. interesting, funny, i learned a lot.
for an artist, this is an excellent movie..

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