Bless Their Little Hearts

2 April, 2015 - 20:00
Paddenhoek

 

 

Followed by a DISSENT! talk with Billy Woodberry.

 

L.A. Rebellion: Creating a New Black Cinema is a project by UCLA Film & Television Archive developed as part of Pacific Standard Time: Art in L.A. 1945-1980. The original series took place at UCLA Film & Television Archive in October – December 2011, curated by Allyson Nadia Field, Jan-Christopher Horak, Shannon Kelley and Jacqueline Stewart.

The Courtisane Festival will present a modest selection of over 50 representative works, many of them in new prints and restorations. A complete overview of the program can be found on www.cinema.ucla.edu/la-rebellion. In collaboration with Tate Modern & UCLA Film & Television Archive.

Special thanks to George Clark, Steven Hill and Todd Wiener, without whom this program would not have been possible.

 

 

preservation print courtesy of the UCLA Film & Television Archive

Bless Their Little Hearts

Billy Woodberry
,
US
,
1984
,
35mm
,
b&w
,
84'

Billy Woodberry’s film chronicles the devastating effects of underemployment on a family in the same Los Angeles community depicted in Killer of Sheep (1977), and it pays witness to the ravages of time in the short years since its predecessor. Nate Hardman and Kaycee Moore deliver gut-wrenching performances as the couple whose family is torn apart by events beyond their control. If salvation remains, it’s in the sensitive depiction of everyday life, which persists throughout. By 1978, when Bless’ production began, Burnett, then 34, was already an elder statesman and mentor to many within the UCLA film community, and it was he who encouraged Woodberry to pursue a feature length work. In a telling act of trust, Burnett offered the newcomer a startlingly intimate 70-page original scenario and also shot the film. He furthermore connected Woodberry with his cast of friends and relatives, many of whom had appeared in Killer of Sheep, solidifying the two films’ connections. Yet critically, he then held back further instruction, leaving Woodberry to develop the material, direct and edit. As Woodberry reveals, “He would deliberately restrain himself from giving me the solution to things.” The first-time feature director delivered brilliantly, and the result is an ensemble work that represents the cumulative visions of Woodberry, Burnett and their excellent cast. (Ross Lipman)