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The story of Atlanta robbery boy and crack dealer, Curtis Snow, who stole a camera from some college kids in a dope deal and made a documentary about his life.The story of Atlanta robbery boy and crack dealer, Curtis Snow, who stole a camera from some college kids in a dope deal and made a documentary about his life.The story of Atlanta robbery boy and crack dealer, Curtis Snow, who stole a camera from some college kids in a dope deal and made a documentary about his life.
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Certainly one of the more interesting and unique found footage type movies I've seen in a while. It approaches the plot of a low-level criminal named Curtis stealing a video camera and documenting his life in a more serious fashion than expected. Not that I thought this would be a comedy, but I guess I wasn't prepared for it to get as heavy and insightful as it does (and I mean that in a good way).
It provides an insight into why people commit crimes (early on, Curtis mentions it being about paying for very ordinary things like rent and providing for his infant child), and also depicts how the cycle of drug dealing and crime can continue through generations in the film's best scene, where he prepares drugs for sale whilst talking about how his family did it when he was a kid, and observes his own child running around as he prepares drugs and states that he himself remembered doing that as a kid.
The authenticity and commitment to the found footage style is admirable. In its attempts to replicate true life, it doesn't exactly have the most satisfying narrative, as hey, I guess life doesn't always follow a 3-act structure. The dialogue is also sometimes not audible, features a lot of slang, and frequently people talk over each other. Again, true to life, but not always easy to understand as a viewer.
You can also nitpick things like "did they steal the camera charger? If not, why hadn't the battery run out?" and "why is everyone cool with documenting video evidence of being involved in certain crimes?" but I guess a suspension of disbelief is required for almost all found footage movies, even otherwise very authentic ones like this.
If you treat this film as a bit of an experiment as well as a look into how and why crimes of this nature happen, then it succeeds. If you come into it wanting pure entertainment and thrills, and/or a super satisfying story, you may be disappointed. If you can get on board with the former, I'd certainly recommend it, and though it wasn't the easiest watch, I'm glad I experienced it.
It provides an insight into why people commit crimes (early on, Curtis mentions it being about paying for very ordinary things like rent and providing for his infant child), and also depicts how the cycle of drug dealing and crime can continue through generations in the film's best scene, where he prepares drugs for sale whilst talking about how his family did it when he was a kid, and observes his own child running around as he prepares drugs and states that he himself remembered doing that as a kid.
The authenticity and commitment to the found footage style is admirable. In its attempts to replicate true life, it doesn't exactly have the most satisfying narrative, as hey, I guess life doesn't always follow a 3-act structure. The dialogue is also sometimes not audible, features a lot of slang, and frequently people talk over each other. Again, true to life, but not always easy to understand as a viewer.
You can also nitpick things like "did they steal the camera charger? If not, why hadn't the battery run out?" and "why is everyone cool with documenting video evidence of being involved in certain crimes?" but I guess a suspension of disbelief is required for almost all found footage movies, even otherwise very authentic ones like this.
If you treat this film as a bit of an experiment as well as a look into how and why crimes of this nature happen, then it succeeds. If you come into it wanting pure entertainment and thrills, and/or a super satisfying story, you may be disappointed. If you can get on board with the former, I'd certainly recommend it, and though it wasn't the easiest watch, I'm glad I experienced it.
This is another found-footage film that veers into uncharted waters and takes a look without any moral judgement (like most Hollywood movies) of Atlanta's most dangerous hood, "The Bluff". When you watch this movie, you see it from Curtis Snow's perspective, who is a drug dealer, robbery boy who only knows the life he was born into.
To the reviewer who mentioned that this film has no artistic value, I would definitely have to disagree. Though the film's content is harsh and unrelenting the way the camera follows the action, the way in which this film was cut together, and the social questions it raises along with the controversy are quite an artistic accomplishment. I would suspect that the deep underlying issues that this film raises is the reason this independent movie has seen such attention in the press (and the reason I watched it).
I feel that this film really is a call to action. Every city in America has ghetto's such as these that are largely ignored by the mass public, and I think we need to look at restoring these places in order to help the children (like a young Curtis Snow) who were born into drugs, guns, and violence.
To the reviewer who mentioned that this film has no artistic value, I would definitely have to disagree. Though the film's content is harsh and unrelenting the way the camera follows the action, the way in which this film was cut together, and the social questions it raises along with the controversy are quite an artistic accomplishment. I would suspect that the deep underlying issues that this film raises is the reason this independent movie has seen such attention in the press (and the reason I watched it).
I feel that this film really is a call to action. Every city in America has ghetto's such as these that are largely ignored by the mass public, and I think we need to look at restoring these places in order to help the children (like a young Curtis Snow) who were born into drugs, guns, and violence.
Obviously not a documentary, as some places claim, but it's still real. They basically took events that happened over the years and pressed it into a plot. Then they went to everybody in the hood and said just play yourself and reenact this story. I'm sure they didn't even need scripts, which is what makes it as real as a documentary, in a way. Very eye opening in general. More deeply though, the filmmakers also created a good commentary on the rough side of inner city life. It is worth a watch and I would like to see more found-film movies take this approach, as far as sticking to stories that are more or less retellings.
Wow this documentary was something else I wouldn't even call it a movie because it was real life. Communities like this one is all over the U.S. and as black people we definitely deserve more. I feel so sorry for what my people have endured since 1619. One day we will rise
Cameras are truly remarkable things, wouldn't you say? They have one major job, which is keeping an unblinking record of what is placed in front of it after being activated. In Curtis Snow's debut mockumentary, Snow on Tha Bluff, it captures dehumanizing events of absolutely depressing measures. A cacophony of madness, lawlessness, and sickening behavior done by the lost wandering souls of a dangerous neighborhood in Atlanta nicknamed "the Bluff." By the end of this picture, which runs only seventy-nine minutes, I was filled to the brim with sadness and nihilism.
This is a well-made film, which is a good thing because it gives me something to recommend and makes a valid use of my time, but bad because it's all too effective. It, at first, concerns a group of three college students, driving through the seedy "Bluff" neighborhood where they meet Curtis Snow, who first hops in their car appearing to be interested in selling them all sorts of drugs, before robbing them at gunpoint and stealing their camera. What follows is Snow having his buddy Damon Russell film his large group of friends and how they interact with each other and deal with day-to-day complications in one of Atlanta's roughest neighborhoods. Activities such as theft, shootouts, drug sales, and drug robberies all commence with Snow at the forefront of everything. He tells how he has lost several family members to the rough and tumble gang violence of the Bluff and goes on to show how he has fathered children with different mothers, and is struggling to provide them with the necessities of living a fulfilling and enriching life. The Bluff seems to be the blackhole of the state of Georgia; education is non-existent, the culture is morally bankrupt, the people are violent and near, if not already, a complete and total wreck, and the only two concerns we see present are living to open your eyes the next morning and possessing enough drugs to get you through the night.
While Snow lives in the impoverished, economically destitute community of "the Bluff," his day-to-day struggles (aside from drug robberies and shootouts) likely mirror those of a middle class family. He constantly is worried about his two children and their mother, always trying to have enough money in hand to provide them with luxuries, but finds the only way he can keep giving them what they need is by giving other individuals what they really don't need, which are drugs.
We've been told for years that drugs are bad and that we should stay away from them. Snow acknowledges that, but turns around says that they, however, do help one afford monthly rent. They keep him on a steady, viable income and assist in feeding home and his kids one more day out of the year. Notice how I consistently say "one more day" or "the next morning." There's no macro-scope on life in "the Bluff." For children, it's "if I grow up," not "when I grow up." It's those little hurting details that make Snow on Tha Bluff, a documentary that is seemingly staged but apparently not far from life, on the track of realism.
The final thing to mention about this film is its dialog, which is often incoherent, overly-loud, mumbled, yet accurate to the culture, I presume. Rarely does a sentence become clear when we either have three or more people talking at the same time, with no respect for conversational poetry or fluency or just mumbled, incomprehensible gibberish in place of actual sentence continuity.
I return to the statement I make at the beginning, which was, "I was filled to the brim with sadness and nihilism" while watching Snow on Tha Bluff. It's a film that does what I love, which exposes other cultures and compares how drastically different they are or how closely they mirror the audience's, and it does it all too effectively, which is what makes the film even more valuable and hence why there is the looming sadness and nihilism to go along with it. It's an impacting picture - one I'd hesitate to watch again. It didn't provide me with the same enjoyment I got from a similar documentary, The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virgina, which was spry, fun, often comedic, and insightful, and it was authentic. Snow on Tha Bluff is more of a reenactment.
NOTE: On a final note, consider how I call this film a "mockumentary" in my opening paragraph. Much has been made and questioned about the authenticity of the material provided in Damon Russell's Snow on Tha Bluff, and through the research I've done, I resort to calling it a mockumentary for two reasons. One, I doubt that Curtis and his friends, if they really were robbing homes for drugs, would want that footage shown to other people, much less the world, and the camera-theft at the beginning seems all too convenient. Why would Curtis keep that in during the editing? Starring: Curtis Snow. Directed by: Damon Russell.
This is a well-made film, which is a good thing because it gives me something to recommend and makes a valid use of my time, but bad because it's all too effective. It, at first, concerns a group of three college students, driving through the seedy "Bluff" neighborhood where they meet Curtis Snow, who first hops in their car appearing to be interested in selling them all sorts of drugs, before robbing them at gunpoint and stealing their camera. What follows is Snow having his buddy Damon Russell film his large group of friends and how they interact with each other and deal with day-to-day complications in one of Atlanta's roughest neighborhoods. Activities such as theft, shootouts, drug sales, and drug robberies all commence with Snow at the forefront of everything. He tells how he has lost several family members to the rough and tumble gang violence of the Bluff and goes on to show how he has fathered children with different mothers, and is struggling to provide them with the necessities of living a fulfilling and enriching life. The Bluff seems to be the blackhole of the state of Georgia; education is non-existent, the culture is morally bankrupt, the people are violent and near, if not already, a complete and total wreck, and the only two concerns we see present are living to open your eyes the next morning and possessing enough drugs to get you through the night.
While Snow lives in the impoverished, economically destitute community of "the Bluff," his day-to-day struggles (aside from drug robberies and shootouts) likely mirror those of a middle class family. He constantly is worried about his two children and their mother, always trying to have enough money in hand to provide them with luxuries, but finds the only way he can keep giving them what they need is by giving other individuals what they really don't need, which are drugs.
We've been told for years that drugs are bad and that we should stay away from them. Snow acknowledges that, but turns around says that they, however, do help one afford monthly rent. They keep him on a steady, viable income and assist in feeding home and his kids one more day out of the year. Notice how I consistently say "one more day" or "the next morning." There's no macro-scope on life in "the Bluff." For children, it's "if I grow up," not "when I grow up." It's those little hurting details that make Snow on Tha Bluff, a documentary that is seemingly staged but apparently not far from life, on the track of realism.
The final thing to mention about this film is its dialog, which is often incoherent, overly-loud, mumbled, yet accurate to the culture, I presume. Rarely does a sentence become clear when we either have three or more people talking at the same time, with no respect for conversational poetry or fluency or just mumbled, incomprehensible gibberish in place of actual sentence continuity.
I return to the statement I make at the beginning, which was, "I was filled to the brim with sadness and nihilism" while watching Snow on Tha Bluff. It's a film that does what I love, which exposes other cultures and compares how drastically different they are or how closely they mirror the audience's, and it does it all too effectively, which is what makes the film even more valuable and hence why there is the looming sadness and nihilism to go along with it. It's an impacting picture - one I'd hesitate to watch again. It didn't provide me with the same enjoyment I got from a similar documentary, The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virgina, which was spry, fun, often comedic, and insightful, and it was authentic. Snow on Tha Bluff is more of a reenactment.
NOTE: On a final note, consider how I call this film a "mockumentary" in my opening paragraph. Much has been made and questioned about the authenticity of the material provided in Damon Russell's Snow on Tha Bluff, and through the research I've done, I resort to calling it a mockumentary for two reasons. One, I doubt that Curtis and his friends, if they really were robbing homes for drugs, would want that footage shown to other people, much less the world, and the camera-theft at the beginning seems all too convenient. Why would Curtis keep that in during the editing? Starring: Curtis Snow. Directed by: Damon Russell.
Did you know
- TriviaIn 2012, Curtis Snow was arrested for charges related to the filming of this movie.
- How long is Snow on tha Bluff?Powered by Alexa
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- Сноу на Блафе
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- Runtime1 hour 19 minutes
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