Coming to Brooklyn’s indieScreen for three nights beginning tonight, Tuesday, December 27: BILL CUNNINGHAM NEW YORK
Richard Press debuted his affectionate portrait of The New York Times fashion photographer as the opening night film of last year’s New Directors/New Films. Since then, the doc traveled extensively on the festival circuit, winning audience and jury awards at Abu Dhabi, Melbourne, Sydney, Canberra, and Nantucket, and was released theatrically and on ancillary by Zeitgeist Films.
Cunningham, an octogenarian obsessed with documenting trends in fashion, has provided the Times Style section with the “On the Street” and “Evening Hours” columns for decades. Seen riding all over the city on his bicycle, stopping to snap a pedestrian’s trend-setting shoes or dress, or attending an upper-crust society function, Cunningham has largely remained a quiet observer, letting his photographs, and his meticulously arranged column speak for him instead. In Press’ winning film, he somewhat reluctantly allows himself to emerge from behind the camera, cautiously revealing aspects of his life that the viewer can readily tell have been kept close to his signature blue smock. At once both a fascinating immersion into one man’s creative process, and into the shifting visual landscape of New York fashion over half a century, the film also surprises with a deeply felt sadness about the personal sacrifices Cunningham apparently felt he had to make – most poignantly realized in a brief scene where the solitary photographer is asked about his personal relationships. Through its understated and insightful approach to a modest, quiet subject, Press’ film, like the most accomplished documentaries, is able to surpass the apparent specificity of its nominal topic to engage an audience that might not ever care about fashion photography.

Battle for brooklyn also plays these three nights- at 8pm and we will be doing q and a- make it a double feature.