![]() ![]() It’s like a re-enactment but we re-enact it so good they can’t respect you.įidell: Which is terrible it should be respected. They see it but they only show the bad of it. ![]() It’s theatricality but it’s happening for real. Our whole outlook was we were trying to get something stirred up. It’s made to make you laugh, it’s made to make you cry. Snow: And the whole point of our film is that it’s made to get you emotional. If we don’t see that they got no water, we never believe it.įidell: Yeah, I don’t know if you guys have seen it but there’s a video online on a website called, strangely enough, Funny or Die and it’s two old white folks saying that-like they’re giving their critique of the film and they just found it to be…I think in most cases they say just funny stuff but in your case they say that this is a film that needs to be shown to everyone. If they don’t see it, out of sight, out of mind. The public doesn’t want to see that but they have to see that for shit like that to be dealt with. There’s drugs and violence and gangs and all that goin’ on but they don’t want you to see that. But there’s one in every neighborhood-there’s a guy like me in every neighborhood. ![]() This stuff goes on, you know, this is a true story. Snow: It’s just a lot of stuff that they just try to sweep up under the rug and they don’t want you to see what goes on in neighborhoods for real. I think people look at the film and think it is glorifying violence and glorifying drug dealing and all that stuff. We really spared the crowd.įidell: Why would people be offended by the movie? And we didn’t even put the worst stuff in, you know? But it’s funny because a lot of people are like, “Ah, this film…” and they’re kind of offended or whatever. ![]() For Curtis because he lives that life and all those people live that life, it’s normal for them. #Snow on tha bluff movie movieRussell: There’s a lot going on in that movie behind the camera and even outside of what’s being filmed. Snow: I guess that’s what made it so perfect. Russell: I mean, truth be told we did argue a lot but it was always on creative stuff. He looked at my ideas and I looked at his ideas and we just sat down and thought up a masterpiece.įidell: I feel like that’s such a rare thing to meet someone and just get along with them so well and work together in such a great way. It could’ve been better.” And once we hooked up we knew we was on the same page. And I liked it but I wasn’t satisfied with it and I told him like, “It could’ve been more. Snow: I had seen some of his work before, but I didn’t even know it was his work, you know? Then he told me he had already done shit like Black on Black. How did Damon prove himself to be worthy of being the guy who could make your story into a film? I stopped the movie and immediately sent Nick an e-mail saying “This movie is awesome.” And then I actually invited friends of mine in the neighborhood to come over and watch it with me because it was clear that this was unlike anything I had ever seen before. We wanted to put you right in the middle of the action.įidell: Yeah, it worked. From the start we just wanted to make it look real, real, real. Was that how you guys always figured you were going to go into your world? įidell: Within the first five minutes, I was blown away. Filmmaker asked one of those viewers, 2012 “25 New Faces” alum Hannah Fidell, to interview both Snow on Tha Bluff‘s co-writer/director Russell (himself a “25 New Face” from 2011) and co-writer/star Curtis Snow about the film, its making, and the reason it has received such a strong response from viewers. Since becoming available through such platforms as iTunes and Netflix Watch Instantly, Snow on Tha Bluff has found a new and highly engaged audience which has discovered and been electrified by the film. Writing about it then, Filmmaker’s own Brandon Harris described the film as “An incredible combination of found footage, no-budget narrative ingenuity and pulled-from-the-streets doc immediacy, discovers in its incredibly charismatic and troubled protagonist, Curtis Snow, an American life many of us would probably rather forget about.” In Directing, Directors, Filmmaking, InterviewsĢ5 New Faces, Curtis Snow, Damon Russell, Snow on tha BluffĪfter debuting at the Slamdance Film Festival in 2011, Damon Russell’s Snow on Tha Bluff had a small theatrical release earlier this year. ![]()
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