Advertisement

CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS

Posts tagged with: Oberzan

Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation
phile under: TBA

TBA 2010: Flooding With
Love For The Kid

Oberzan’s homemade Rambo redo is a little
rough around the edges, but it still kills.

Email
Rambo

Okay, Zachary Oberzan, we hear your title’s implicit wish: that we flood with love…for you. I know, I know, the phrase is in the original dialogue of the novel/Rambo film First Blood, which you’ve faithfully recreated alone in your tiny New York apartment. But over and over your movie presents us with variations of–well, you. And one of the you’s, as a matter of logistical necessity, eventually professes love for the other you. And we’re just supposed to roll over and follow your lead.

Well, I may be wise to you, Kid–but I’m still gonna fall for it. This film is one of those undertakings that earns accolades regardless of the product because:

a) you thought of it, and,
b) you did it.

Luckily, there’s more to recommend this movie. In the context of the home-film revolution, The Kid is a beacon of inspiration. Amid a million self-serving webcam rants that channel Stuart “good enough, smart enough” Smalley, Kid’s ambition challenges other no-budget filmers to think and work harder. “We may not have the money, honey,” it seems to say, “but we’ve sure got the time.”

Rambo suffers. These days, we would call his malady PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder). A vagrant vet whose military service has left him in the lurch, in First Blood, Rambo the stoic war hero is harassed to the breaking point by Teasle the reactionary small-town sheriff. The relevance of veteran reassimilation in modern America needn’t be explained beyond this exchange:

Teasle: “I don’t kill for a living.”
Trautman: “No, you tolerate a system that does it for you. And when they get back from the war, you can’t tolerate the stench of death on them.”

Oberzan fully inhabits both the character that suffers, and the character that torments, even as the plot progresses and Rambo becomes the assailant and Sherriff Teasle the victim. (Meanwhile, Oberzan also portrays all the other poor bastards on the scene: deputies, woodsmen, state police, and special forces). It’s a multi-faceted exercise in empathy–indeed, love–for all the flawed but well-meaning men pitted against each other in the fray.

Speaking of flaws, here’s what Oberzan’s much-boasted $95 budget didn’t buy:

A dialect coach. A couple of Oberzan’s accents, most notably the southern twang he uses to play Sheriff Teasle, are inconsistent. Fortunately, even a badly-done accent helps differentiate one character from another so the attempt ultimately proves useful. But when Oberzan acts so well, you wish he could sell the accents a little better.

A musical score. The credits don’t attribute the music to anyone so I’m guessing the budget didn’t cover it. Musical moments seem sparse and short, and some of them are choral–so maybe Oberzan has lawfully used public-domain works and short samples. Still, as a scrupulous producer he should tell us what we’re hearing.

One thing that the promos don’t do justice, is how heroically Oberzan attacks his “action sequences”, crawling all over his apartment, rustling tree-branches around, wearing bloody (not ketchuppy) wounds and painful (not putty-like) scars. At one point he even snares and skins a small teddy bear for survival food. With his quick cuts between characters and apt suspense, you almost get swept up enough in the action to forget that it’s all one guy.

All in all, you can’t help but love Oberzan, and The Kid, for conquering against all odds.

Add a Comment »

Tags: comedy, Film, drama, Oberzan, indie, solo,

phile under: TBA2010

TBA 2010: Zachary Oberzan

A Few Things You Should Know About “Flooding with Love for the Kid”

Email
Floodingwithlove1-web

Zachary Oberzan in his one-man movie adaptation of First Blood.

Photo courtesy of P.I.C.A

What do you get when you mix one man, a driving obsession and a 220-square-foot studio apartment in New York?

An epic film, of course: Flooding with Love for the Kid, Zachary Oberzan’s adaptation of First Blood (the David Morrell novel which gave us Rambo). The film will be screened tonight through Wednesday, and I strongly urge you to check it out. Oberzan is one of the original members of Nature Theater of Oklahoma, where he helped to create the related theatrical production, Rambo Solo, which hopefully will make it out to TBA before too long. He has also performed with the Wooster Group and is currently touring his own work. He’s got serious acting chops, and the mere fact that he was mad enough to make this film makes me smile (let alone that he pulled it off, and how).

But enough about what I think you should know about Zachary. Here’s what he thinks you should know:

Eleven things I want you to know

1. There were 3 rules I set at the beginning of the project.

2. The first rule was I had to do everything myself, just as Rambo had to wage his one-man war by himself.

3. The second rule was that the whole film would be shot in my apartment, using only things that already existed in my apartment, just as Rambo only had what was at hand out there in the Kentucky woods.

4. The third rule was that it was a completely accurate transposing of written word to film. Every scene in the book is in the film, and nothing else, every line of dialogue in the book is in the film, and nothing else.

5. I bent the second and third rules very very slightly. I brought in some pine branches from the park. And I changed a few words. But the first and most important rule remained intact.

6. First Blood is a really great book. I’ve read it more than any other book. It’s my favorite. I think my second favorite is The Catcher in the Rye, or maybe Breakfast of Champions.

7. I thought it would take a year to make my film, but I became very obsessed with it. In a good way. It was so much fun. So it only took about 7 months. I made it in 2007, when I was 33.

8. Most of the budget went to tapes. I spent $60 on 12 mini dv tapes.

9. I didn’t expect anyone to see it.

10. You can watch the Making Of documentary, I Shot Him and All at Once I Didn’t Hate Him Anymore online at my website.

11. I’m going to make a 50 million dollar version, on location in Kentucky. I’ll probably play Teasle.

Flooding with Love for the Kid

For more information on TBA events, visit PICA. A more comprehensive list of upcoming events can be found at our Arts & Entertainment Calendar.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Film, performance art, TBA, TBA 2010, Oberzan

Advertisement