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Monster Road

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Monster Road

Explores the wildly fantastic world of legendary underground clay animator Bruce Bickford. Traces the origins of his remarkably unique sensibility, journeying back to Bickford's childhood in a competitive household during the paranoia of the Cold War. Finally, the film examines Bickford's relationship with his father, George, who is grappling with the onset of Alzheimer's Disease.

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Release : 2004
Rating : 7.7
Studio :
Crew : Director, 
Cast :
Genre : Animation Documentary

Cast List

Reviews

Greenes
2018/08/30

Please don't spend money on this.

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Steineded
2018/08/30

How sad is this?

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SeeQuant
2018/08/30

Blending excellent reporting and strong storytelling, this is a disturbing film truly stranger than fiction

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Freeman
2018/08/30

This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.

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ryandzirk
2009/07/03

Bruce Bickford is the godfather of clay animation. This film won multiple awards for multiple reasons. It is completely in-depth and goes straight to the core of Bickford's art. Monster Road brings Bickford's world right to you. As Frank Zappa's house animator, Bruce Bickford spent many painstaking hours of tedious work on his animation. Today, as an independent animator, he continues the same thing. Weather it be 3-D clay animation or 2 dimensional line animation, Bickford makes sure he gets it just right. What a horror show you say? Most people are too scared to pour their brains out through their fingers and make it visible for the whole world to see and very few have the talent and patience to create such a colorful landscape of images that will haunt you for the rest of your days. I appreciate Brett Ingrams efforts in documenting of this LEGENDARY artist.

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woundupwounded
2006/04/03

(^ From the viewpoint of the other person in camera for a short rift about small places, I found the film to at long last find me not alone with the Bickford dilemma. Thanks to Brett for allowing me it drag him up to George's in order to give him an angle on Bruce's work that would inspire instead of horrify.Monster Road works as a documentary by giving viewers a breather between animation shots. I personally wince at the overload of graphics myself, even tho I've been overdosed to the point of inoculation by it."WHY , Bruce, WHY?!" seems to somehow finally been resolved, in a way that takes way too long hanging out with Bruce alone for most to bother.I hope this hitting DVD will open up the viewing audience to Alzheimer care givers' discussion groups.

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th25tina
2005/07/12

I had never heard of Bruce before watching Monster Road but his artwork seems very familiar. (I've probably seen bits and pieces in other films?) I think he's a great artist and has the greatest philosophy on life. Monster Road is a very informative film and really shows his devotion and ability to make some pretty amazing stuff. I also like the emotional scenes when his father spoke, a brilliant mind being ravaged by a terrible disease...they are truly two very thoughtful people who have more creativity then most people. If you have the chance to see this film please do....it's wonderful and has some amazing artwork. Just seeing it caused me to look into more of Bruce's work and I was disappointed to find that there is not much out there. I think a lot of musicians would benefit if they used his artwork in some videos. It would also make me happy to see more too!

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Bernnard_Black
2005/02/26

I was unfortunate enough to be exposed to this abomination at a film festival recently. I don't know who Bruce Bickford is, but somewhere, an asylum is missing an inmate. This guy's claymation art, while skillfully done and painstakingly detailed, is truly disturbing. The images are almost unbelievably violent and gory; little clay torture chambers, be-headings, disembowlings, and other atrocities are performed on the inhabitants of his claymation universe. God knows the stuff isn't suitable for kids, and even some adults would be turned off by the sheer enormity of his violent, surreal and grotesque work. On another level, the film is just plain, well, bad. A documentary is supposed to educate and inform; this film really does neither, and instead is a simple collection of "interviews" with Bickford in his home, expounding on matters metaphysical and real, all interspersed with snippets of his claymation films. I was left feeling that I knew little about Bruce Bickford, and didn't want to know more.

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