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High-Quality Chain Camera for Photography - Durable & Stylish Neck Strap Camera for Travel, Hiking, and Outdoor Adventures
$37.45
$49.94
Safe 25%
High-Quality Chain Camera for Photography - Durable & Stylish Neck Strap Camera for Travel, Hiking, and Outdoor Adventures
High-Quality Chain Camera for Photography - Durable & Stylish Neck Strap Camera for Travel, Hiking, and Outdoor Adventures
High-Quality Chain Camera for Photography - Durable & Stylish Neck Strap Camera for Travel, Hiking, and Outdoor Adventures
$37.45
$49.94
25% Off
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Estimated Delivery: 10-15 days international
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SKU: 41682131
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Description
Product Description Ten students at John Marshall High School in Los Angeles were given video cameras to film their lives. There were no limitations on what they could shoot. After one week, the cameras were given to ten new students, who filmed their lives for a week, then handed the cameras on. Like chain letters, these cameras were passed from student to student for an entire year. (FilmNoir Post Productions) Amazon.com Documentarian Kirby Dick (Twist of Fate, Sick) gave video cameras to students at John Marshall High School in Los Angeles and asked them to record their lives for a week, after which the cameras were passed on to other students who recorded their lives for a week, and so on for the extent of the school year. The resulting 700 hours of footage was whittled down to a fascinating and frustrating 84-minute documentary--fascinating because of the raw depiction of adolescence, simultaneously self-conscious and unfiltered; frustrating because 16 students are only seen for around five minutes each, making each segment little more than a glimpse into an entire life. Kids like sassy lesbian Cinnamon, politically driven Jesse, or bright, bubbly, and painfully self-deprecating Amy deserve more than five minutes--in fact, viewers will want to know more about all of these kids, as well as ones included in deleted segments. Still, one would be frustrated if Chain Camera weren't successful at capturing something genuine--despite the swearing, broken homes, and sexual experimentation, these teens have a fundamental innocence that's on the brink of being lost. The contrast between these real kids and the glossy teenagers depicted in movies and television (Marshall High is the set for Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Grease) couldn't be more poignant. --Bret Fetzer
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Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
An amazing look into the lives of young people. The notion of diversity means so much when you are confronted with these characters of different races, sexualities, desires, and interests who all seem to share similar insecurities and pain. More than anything this film humanizes young people. The producer of the film allowed every word and shot to come from these teenagers who are in so many ways so incredibly mature and intelligent and broken. Something about this being a pre-911, pre-cell phone, and largely pre-Internet look at teenagers' lives also gives the film a time-capsule quality as well. Amazing to watch. I don't think I am overstating it when I say that this film represents this country and the millennial generation to a greater degree than most other films of any budget I have ever seen, and I would do anything to learn where they are all now 15 years later.

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