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Benjamin Smoke (2000)
Released By: Plexifilm   Rating: Not Rated   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Plexifilm
Genre: Documentary
MPAA Rating: Not Rated
Director: Jem Cohen
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Benjamin Dickerson, Tim Campion, Brian Halloran, Coleman Lewis, Bill Taft
Published ID: 579580
UPC: 082354000424,
Plot: Noted documentary filmmaker Jem Cohen (along with Peter Sillen) directs this look at Benjamin, a Southern, gay, HIV positive, drug-addicted drag queen who led the blues-punk band Smoke. Born Robert Dickerson in 1960, Benjamin played punk in Atlanta's grungy Cabbagetown section before fronting the queer-core band Opal Foxx Quartet. Thereafter, he began experimenting with such decidedly unpunk instruments as banjos and cellos and formed Smoke. As Cabbagetown lost its edgy spirit during the 1990s -- thanks to the yuppie-friendly condo boom -- so did Benjamin lose his fight against AIDS. He died of the disease early in 1999. This film was screened at the 2000 Berlin Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Mesmerizing...
Added 11/19/2007

I was fortunate enough to be able to see this at the National Film Theatre when I was living in London. I was in a film class through University College London, and we had the chance to see about 5 of Jem Cohen's documentaries - and the best part was that Cohen was there too, and after the film he got up and spoke about them and took questions.

I had never heard of Benjamin Smoke before seeing this documentary, but have been intrigued by him ever since. The documentary is stunning in it's portrayal of Benjamin, and you really do get the sense that you've been taken somewhere else - a completely different realm - if only for a few minutes. I'm a freelance photographer and I cannot say how often the images from this documentary have run through my mind as I've tried to capture my own sense of "difference" in the world.

This is definitely a mood piece, and I'd say that it'd be best to watch it in a place where you can just focus on the film itself - let yourself be mesmerized by it...

2 out of 2 people found this helpful.
rings
Added 12/20/2003

The last thing Benjamin'd want is for some sycophant to "justify" his life. Jem Cohen does as is his want in evoking the life of a true elysian navigator: pastels, washes, cinematic perfumes. Throughout it all Benjamin riffs; his grit betraying a lucidity that many choose to ignore.
4 out of 5 people found this helpful.
Gone but not forgotten
Added 1/31/2003

If this is your first exposure to Benjamin and the music of Smoke, you might find his openess and life unsettling, but given a chance this drug-gobbling, dress-wearing poet will take up residence in your soul. This film captures, probably as well as is possible, the amazingly unique man that was Benjamin. While the film shows us tragic times, it isn't a tragedy. Instead, it's the story of a brave--and strange-- heart, who just didn't fit into the "real" world. Our loss.
15 out of 15 people found this helpful.
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$34.97 @ Amazon