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Public Speaking

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Public Speaking

A feature-length documentary starring Fran Lebowitz, a writer known for her unique take on modern life. The film weaves together extemporaneous monologues with archival footage and the effect is a portrait of Fran's worldview and experiences.

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Release : 2010
Rating : 7.6
Studio : Consolidated Documentaries,  HBO Documentary Films,  Sikelia Productions, 
Crew : Director of Photography,  Director, 
Cast : Fran Lebowitz Pablo Picasso James Baldwin Serge Gainsbourg Candy Darling
Genre : Documentary

Cast List

Reviews

Actuakers
2018/08/30

One of my all time favorites.

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Fairaher
2018/08/30

The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.

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ChanFamous
2018/08/30

I wanted to like it more than I actually did... But much of the humor totally escaped me and I walked out only mildly impressed.

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Invaderbank
2018/08/30

The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.

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Peter22060
2011/09/16

A truly delightful and enlightening experience. Fran Lebowitz guides the viewer through her experience with a multitude of famous, and now deceased, great artists. Although Fran is 14 years my junior, she has grasped the essence of America. A scene with Pack Paar and Oscar Levant is gracefully mixed with sound bites from William Buckley, Jr and the fine playwrights of the last century. I felt a great deal of empathy for her when she discussed what turned out to be a big guffaw at an outdoor rally organized by Joe Papp. Arts oriented persons should feel perfectly at home listening to her monologue. Whether I watch the History Channel, PBS or HBO, seldom is there as entertaining a story as this. This is a solid recommendation for anyone who wants an in depth personal account of the arts.

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Niklas Pivic
2011/06/14

I didn't know of Fran Liebowitz, a famed New Yorker, Jewish writer, infamous wit. As this documentary starts, she states that "There is no more suitable and potent image/symbol for our time than the image of the blind art collector. [...] I think that sums it up. If you were gonna write just a history of the era, you should call it 'The blind art collector, and other stories'." She talks much, and says a lot. She is really funny and insightful, which I cannot claim that a lot of people are. She keeps going and going, and does claim a lot of air and concentration, so she works for me in small doses. As a documentary, it's all about Liebowitz's speaking and very little else. She's all there is to this, and it's entertaining as well as thought-provoking. She says racism is a fantasy, while sexism is a reality. She speaks out on getting older as well as being young, on writing and talking, on acceptance and hate. Not much on love, though. All in all, totally worth watching.

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jotix100
2011/04/15

Fran Lebowitz has been a part of the New York cultural scene since her arrival many years ago. She was a product of suburban New Jersey that never fitted in the small town atmosphere where she grew. Her passion for reading got her in enough trouble to be expelled from school. Her only alternative was to leave her surroundings and go to New York, a refuge for people like her, that found a haven among people that accepted her from the start. She confesses to have been taken by older gay friends that nurtured her in unexpected ways.Martin Scorsese, a fan of Ms. Lebowitz, sat with her in one of her favorite places, the Waverly Inn, where she expands on her way of looking at life and her eternal love for her adoptive city. When asked to explain about writer's block, she explains that she has suffered from the malady most of other famous authors have gone through.There are a lot of things she misses from the "good all days" when she came into the scene. The idea of previous eras being better becomes one of the main topics in the conversation. Finding people like James Baldwin when she first came to the city, showed her, in a way, the path she wanted to take. Even with only two books of essays to her name, Ms. Lebowitz is an authority in what is really happening in New York. Not being able to smoke in public is one of the things she misses the most. As far as she is concerned, the culture now has become boring.There is a section of the documentary that shows Ms. Lebowitz being interviewed by Toni Morrison, a friend, in front of an audience. One of the most hilarious situations she recounts is the almost international incident she provoked in Stockholm, when she accompanied Ms. Morrison to her acceptance of the Nobel prize. As a guest, she was relegated to the table set for the children of other prize winners, something that she thought it was uncalled for. Getting up to go to her agent's table was a faux pas on her part, not knowing the court's protocol.The conversation with Ms. Lebowitz was a good way to know something more personal of this witty writer.

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adrienne_aline
2011/02/23

Fran Leboits is an uncommon woman. The film is basically one long, casual interview.She's a fast-talking, witty, very opinionated, intriguing story-teller. Her humor reminds me of a less crass, less cynical version of George Carlin. She talks about being a woman, the biological inequality of women (which I rarely get to hear anywhere), homosexuality, the military, marriage, her cigarette addiction, "elites", American culture, democracy, a little bit of everything. Instead of ramming her Jewish background down your throat, she makes humorous, poignant observations. Definitely check it out, especially if you live in or around NYC.

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