Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuPulitzer prize-winning reporter and author, Buzz Bissinger, experiences a sexual awakening while collaborating with Caitlyn Jenner on her tell-all memoir.Pulitzer prize-winning reporter and author, Buzz Bissinger, experiences a sexual awakening while collaborating with Caitlyn Jenner on her tell-all memoir.Pulitzer prize-winning reporter and author, Buzz Bissinger, experiences a sexual awakening while collaborating with Caitlyn Jenner on her tell-all memoir.
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"Buzz" (2019 release; 90 min.) is a documentary about the life and times of best-selling writer Buzz Bissinger ("Friday Night Lights", among many others). As the movie opens, we are in "Malibu, California", where he is collaborating with Caitlyn Jenner on her upcoming memoir about her transitioning from Bruce to Caitlyn. We then go to "Long Beach Peninsula, WA", where Buzz is talking a walk with his wife Lisa Smith and their two dogs. Along the way Buzz admits that "I've got a darkness, I've done a lot of damage." At this point we're 10 min. Into the movie.
Couple of comments: this is written and directed by Andrew Shea ("Wrestling Alligators"), who seemingly spent YEARS following Bissinger around for this film. Let me admit upfront that while I knew Bissinger had written FNL, I knew absolutely nothing about the man. The first half of the film focuses mainly on the author's professional side (his books). The second half of the film shifts significantly more towards the author's personal side, including his interest in leather dressing and cross dressing, S&M, and other related darker topics. And how does his wife deal with this? Just watch! I found it all mildly amusing, and enjoyed watching it, although I don't think I'd watch it again (too much other stuff to watch!).
"Buzz" premiered on HBO in 2019, and somehow I had missed this, but I recently stumbled on it on HBO On Demand. Presumably it's also available on HBO Max, Amazon Instant Video and other streaming services. If you are curious about the man behind the book "Friday Night Lights", I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
Couple of comments: this is written and directed by Andrew Shea ("Wrestling Alligators"), who seemingly spent YEARS following Bissinger around for this film. Let me admit upfront that while I knew Bissinger had written FNL, I knew absolutely nothing about the man. The first half of the film focuses mainly on the author's professional side (his books). The second half of the film shifts significantly more towards the author's personal side, including his interest in leather dressing and cross dressing, S&M, and other related darker topics. And how does his wife deal with this? Just watch! I found it all mildly amusing, and enjoyed watching it, although I don't think I'd watch it again (too much other stuff to watch!).
"Buzz" premiered on HBO in 2019, and somehow I had missed this, but I recently stumbled on it on HBO On Demand. Presumably it's also available on HBO Max, Amazon Instant Video and other streaming services. If you are curious about the man behind the book "Friday Night Lights", I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
Gave this title a look just because it was on HBO -- and knew little more than that it was about the writer of the Friday Night Lights novel -- that the movie and subsequent TV series was based on. Was completely engaged right from the start by Buzz who seemed like a larger-than-life character and it wasn't until maybe 1/3 of the way in that it took a turn into Buzz's secret lifestyle and the struggles it has made him endure. The other main character besides Buzz's conflicted spouse was none other than Caitlyn Jenner; whose biography Buzz just got finished co-authoring -- and the portrayal of Jenner definitely caught us off-guard; in that she was sympathetic and a POV worth hearing. Though the film concentrated increasingly on Buzz's hidden life; it only occasionally felt uncomfortable and certainly never gratuitous or sensationalistic -- two traps it would have been so easy to fall into; more than anything a tribute to the engaging direction and production of the piece. Worth an hour and a half of your time for sure.
I meant to watch half and then go to bed, but really couldn't, it was too compelling, about Buzz Bissinger, Pulitzer Prize winning author, now also exploring the edges of his identity.
Some of my favorite moments were ones that might seem marginal, but I suspect weren't -- an interview with a Friday Night Lights ex-football-star, now in prison; the scene of Buzz teaching writing class -- great teacher! I also really liked the portrait of Lisa, his wife. I began to feel her as a moral centerpiece of the film, also very smart and engaging. There is also fascinating repartee between Caitlin Jenner and Buzz (writing a book about her); the almost "married couple" they became, and the creative process of writing a book.
Buzz is a bit of a mystery to me, maybe because I don't identify with his obsessions, and find them somewhat unappealing. But it's clearly part and parcel of his uniqueness and his brilliance as a reporter -- and I admire the honesty with which he (and Caitlyn) expose their authentic, and long hidden, selves to the world. Pretty amazing stuff to get on film.
I like that the film didn't seem to take any strong editorial point of view, but simply let the characters present themselves as they chose.
Some of my favorite moments were ones that might seem marginal, but I suspect weren't -- an interview with a Friday Night Lights ex-football-star, now in prison; the scene of Buzz teaching writing class -- great teacher! I also really liked the portrait of Lisa, his wife. I began to feel her as a moral centerpiece of the film, also very smart and engaging. There is also fascinating repartee between Caitlin Jenner and Buzz (writing a book about her); the almost "married couple" they became, and the creative process of writing a book.
Buzz is a bit of a mystery to me, maybe because I don't identify with his obsessions, and find them somewhat unappealing. But it's clearly part and parcel of his uniqueness and his brilliance as a reporter -- and I admire the honesty with which he (and Caitlyn) expose their authentic, and long hidden, selves to the world. Pretty amazing stuff to get on film.
I like that the film didn't seem to take any strong editorial point of view, but simply let the characters present themselves as they chose.
Buzz is an engrossing, psychological study of a public figure wrestling with his obsessions and the impact they have on his personal life. The intimate access to Bissinger and his wife and his bare confessions expose the internal conflict of one who genuinely does not fit a mold in society and the weight that misfit status has on one's psyche. Director Andrew Shea has painted a rich portrait of his subject Buzz.
I don't get reviewers (fortunately not many here) saying this is shoving a perspective down our throat. All good art and literature and films help us to be empathetic with someone's experience, and that's what this does, incredibly well. You always have the choice not to watch the film - but you should.
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