NEW YORK, NY.- Acclaimed documentarian Ross McElwees profoundly personal, influential essay-film Sherman's March will run in a new 4K restoration at Film Forum from Friday, July 3 through Thursday, July 9.
Armed with a 16mm camera and a grant to make a documentary about the lingering aftermath of William Tecumseh Shermans 1864 march to the sea, Ross McElwee gets sidetracked. After his girlfriend breaks up with him, Ross shifts his attention from the historical to the personal, to the battlefield of modern love, and embarks on a sociological chronicle that documents the courting rites and rituals of the New South. A generous and humanistic portrait of several remarkable women that Ross meets along the way, Sherman's March sketches its characters with novelistic sensitivity: Pat, an aspiring actress with a yen for Burt Reynolds; Claudia, a roller-skating interior designer; Jackie, the activist whose anti-nuclear advocacy dovetails with Rosss deepest fears; and above all, Charleen Swansea, Rosss mentor and a one-woman Greek chorus of unsolicited romantic counsel. A landmark of first-person filmmaking that presaged everything from Michael Moore to reality TV, Sherman's March is now presented in a new 4K restoration.
McElwees filmmaking career began with his work as an assistant on John Marshalls ethnographic portrait N!AI, THE STORY OF A !KUNG WOMAN (1980), followed by a collaboration with Michel Negroponte on SPACE COAST (1979). He later released CHARLEEN (1977), a portrait of his former teacher and longtime friend, Charleen Swansea. This intimate collaboration with Swansea, along with subsequent films such as BACKYARD (1984), then Sherman's March (1986), helped establish McElwees distinctive and influential approach to documenting personal experience. Sherman's March was a critical and commercial hit. It won the Grand Jury prize at the 1986 Sundance Film Festival, and until the mid-nineties was ranked as one of the highest-grossing documentary films of all time.
Ross McElwee will appear in-person for post-screening Q&As at the Wednesday, July 8, 7:00 PM and Thursday, July 9, 7:00 PM shows of Sherman's March.
Film Forum will present the U.S. theatrical premiere of Ross McElwees newest, Venice Film Festival award-winning documentary Remake on Friday, July 10.
Though McElwee's timing with women is awful, he's a filmmaker-anthropologist with a rare appreciation for the eccentric details of our edgy civilization. Sherman's March is a timely memoir of the 80's. Vincent Canby, The New York Times
A master and pioneer of home movie epics, Ross McElwee makes films that are at once simple, intimate, and infinitely complex. While often starting with the anecdotala mundane thought or simple life eventhis films have a tendency to digress infinitely through dry comedic musings that quickly veer into the metaphysical and meta-cinematic. Joshua Bogatin, Screen Slate
Many try to imitate but none can duplicate the documentary poetry of Ross McElwee
A homegrown, bighearted, quintessentially American documentarian. Entertainment Weekly
One of those rare filmmakers for whom the word visionary is appropriate. The Boston Globe