Melvin Van Peebles-filmmaker, playwright, composer, crooner, ladies' man, and living legend-returns to the screen with this picaresque yarn about a boy from Chicago who wants to see the world and get rich but discovers that all he needs is the love of a good woman. Based on Van Peebles' 1982 Broadway show
Waltz of the Stork,
Confessions chronicles the adventures of a man who, armed only with a can of contingency cash, swims his way to New York, joins the merchant marines, romances women of all ages and an amorous gorilla, and dances for his life in the court of Zampoughi. "Thereby hangs the tale," says Van Peebles. "A piece of one, anyway." That Van Peebles, at 75, plays the title character from boyhood to age 47 only adds to the playful incongruity of this singular saga, which condenses half a century of Black experience -- from the blind bluesmen of Chicago to the hustlers of Harlem to the diamond miners of West Africa -- into a tall tale of one man's wanderlust. As handmade as filmmaking gets Van Peebles uses digital media not as a substitute for film, but as a brand-new toy, and with a cast of friends and family that includes his son Mario Van Peebles as a pirate, Realist editor Paul Krassner, and Classical Theatre of Harlem cofounder Albert Preisser, Van Peebles' semi-musical, barely autobiographical bildungsroman celebrates the joy of storytelling in a personal film straight from the trickster soul of a Renaissance man. "It's tough being called a liar," winks Van Peebles through a puff of smoke, "even when you're lying." (
Tribeca Film Festival)
Directed by Melvin Van Peebles, U.S.A., 2008, DigiBeta, 99 mins.
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NewCity Chicago
Showtimes:
Friday, Sept. 4 at 7 & 9 pm
Sat.-Sun., Sept. 5-6 at 3, 5, 7 & 9 pm
Mon.-Thurs., Sept. 7-10 at 7 & 9 pm