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Billy Idol is Alive

The first scene of Billy Idol Should Be Dead reflects the title of English Punk Rocker’s documentary.  Sitting, the singer tells his studio colleagues about the time he almost died of a drug overdose in 1984.  The career of a rock and roll star is filled with expectations along with pressure. Near death experiences is a normal job hazard.

Director Jonas Akerlund uses a sympathetic eye while going in full with the story William Michael Albert Broad.  Born to a middle-class family in the northwest of London, William should have taken a less than hell on wheels lifestyle, yet fate took him a very different road.

Music’s history is the stories of Bad Boys   These guys cannot go home to meet the parents.  As part of MTV Royalty with songs White Wedding, Rebel Yell, Eyes Without a Face, Idol was in heavy video play rotation during the early years of the 24-hour music. 

The sexy sneer, bleached hair with leather looks seduced a generation.  Behind the sexually charged swagger, self-destruction enabled by an industry that chews up talent, spits them out, then moves on was always present.

What makes Billy Should Be Dead is the protagonist’s affability.  A person you want to hang around, sit in the bus while on tour taking on life as it comes.

Idol does not come across as certifiable, just an over the cliff rebellious individual.  But during his honest introspection, there is no contempt for his admitted behavior.  The 65-year-old is more a naughty child from parents who only shook their heads and prayed for their offspring. 

The family man, father of 3 survived his career.  Now he plays with his grandchildren.  The top 10 charter met a second son conceived during a long weekend with groupie.

Mr. Broad continues to tour under his stage name.  Given the level of hard substances taken, that is no small accomplishment.

 Billy Idol Should Be Dead could be titled “Billy Idol Has an Angel on His Shoulder.”  Thankfully, a rock star can have a happy ending.

Screened online during the 2025 Tribeca Film Festival

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More Short Films from Tribeca

From the Tribeca Film Festival, four more short films that caught my attention.

There is nothing with a film that tugs at the heartstrings. Rise falls into that category.   Jessica J. Rowlands delivers an uplifting story on the ultimate underdog. A n orphaned child living in the garbage dump of Zimbabwe becomes the student of a one-time boxing championing.  The story isn’t just about the fight, but self-worth.

Rise

Snow Bear comes down to what would one of the most ferocious creatures do for companionship in a harsh climate. Director Aaron Blaise brings polar bear cuteness to the screen for 11 minutes in an animated short about friendship and ice.

Linie 12 from directors Sarah Schulz and Christopher Schmier carries an animated story based on the reliable reputation of German train travel even in the face of danger.  Can chaos and managed orchestration come together to save the day?

Pavilhao

From Brazil, Pavilhao is hypnotic energy on the expression, unity and power of Samba in communities. Victoria Fiore’s journey is about getting pulled into the rhythm and sounds as form of liberation from the world.

Screened online during the 2025 Tribeca Film Festival

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Music From Long Island to the World

How did Long Island influence hip hop music?  The New York Borough was a picture-perfect setting for White Flight America. Director Jason Pollard delves into the explosion of talent from the municipalities.  The Sixth Borough is an educational invite to learn about chapter of a musical genre that would conquer the world. 

Race, ethnicity and class have unlevelled the United States since its inception regardless of the state.  Skin color or a last name dictated where a family could buy a house or the school a student could attend. Newly built suburbs connected by freeways offered families of a certain demographic a “safe” enclave.  As African Americas began fleeing the constrictions and dangers of The Big Apple life many turned to the leafy affordable suburbs on Long Island. First generation People of Color moved into single family housing communities bringing with them different cultural sets, including vocal sounds. Hip-hop translated “trauma to music.”

The Sixth Borough paints an ironic picture of striving to be Middle Class while melodically expressing the harsh everyday reality of the underclass.   Pollard’s effusive approach the 70-minute documentary is appealing.  That by chance artists such as: Eric B, Chuck D., Biz Markie, De La Soul and many stars emerged from Long Island is a fascinating portrait of a borough and the people who produced a powerful tempo.

Screened online during the 2025 Tribeca Film Film Festival

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Short Film Disenchantments  

The Tribeca Film Festival short films went to the serious side this year, reflecting an artistic disenchantment with the times. 

President Ronald Regan’s 1980 War on Drugs affected Black American communities for a generation.  With Gestapo tactics men were rounded up, then railroaded into the incarceration system.  Most charges stemmed from Marijuana possession. As states legalize dispensaries People of Color find themselves locked of a fast-growing industry valued at $45 billion.

Kiss My Grass, the short film from directing duo Mary Pryor and Martha Whitehead tells the struggles of Black Women trying to gain a small foothold in the cannabis business.   As the polite smile s from investor reply “no” time and time again, the lady’s frustration of hitting brick walls cannot be overstated.  Black Entrepreneurs know fundraising is a high mountain to climb.  In seventeen minutes, the short film encapsulated the structural racial reality in America. People of Color are jail fodder, however when the moment comes to gain economic benefit, The Sharecropper Rules apply.  America does not have enthusiasm for Black Success.

Mary and Martha bring stats and emotion to the film with spots of outrage, sadness and the hard reality of not being in the right club. 

The 80’s

Money Talks frames multiple stories around encounters with a $100 bill used in New York City at the beginning of Ronald Regan’s America.  Tony Mucci takes a cynical view with characters living on the edge.  The stylized short film keeps the forward moving pattern going with each sequence realistically transitioning to another in 34 minutes. 

Tribeca Film Festival Short Festival
OH YEAH! Dieter Meier and Boris Blank

A pleasant short documentary on a tune that became a sort of scamp theme song of the 80’s hit the mark.   Oh Yeah from Nick Canfield will please the Gen X crowd.  The tune was made famous in the 1986 movie Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and in The Simpsons for Duff Man. Writers Dieter Meier and Boris Blank talk about the process and luck behind 1985 electronic music single.

Freeman Vines the dark open secret of lynching.  Diving into a painful topic, Tim Kirkman and Andre Robert Lee somberly record the story of guitar maker Freeman Vines from Fountain North Carolina.  What makes his instruments special, the wood comes from a true used to murder a Black Man.

Two works inspired by Exploitation Films of the 1970’s, The Wrath of Othell-Yo and ATTAGAIRL.

Tribeca Film Festival Shorts

Wrath is a tale of an actor who gets his chance to play a “big role” in a film production after the lead actor has issues of manhood.

Short mayhem, ATTAGIRL is a fierce short on why you should not get on the bad side of a Bookie from Hell, run for New Jersey!  

All films were screened online from the Tribeca Film Festival platform.

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Stories from the Plantation Life

On My 15th 2025 the largest plantation of them all burned to the ground because of an electrical fire.  The Nottoway Plantation with 53,000 square feet over three floors, 64 rooms was the grandest of them all.  Sitting in White Castle Louisiana, with giant columns, wrap around porches and grand sitting rooms built in 1859 showcased the wealth brought by slavery for owner John Randolf.  What was once a place of violent servitude evolved into a place of celebrations for weddings and selected touristic history.  African Americans celebrated the pyric finality of the antebellum mansion built on the backs of ancestors in chains under a whip.  The Black Social Media memes trended for days. 

Up the river on the opposite stateside shore sits the oldest city on the Mississippi, Natchez, founded in 1716 in the heart of the Deep Cotton Belt.  Grand houses lined leafy streets.  

From the riches of human bondage, Natchez once had the highest concentration of wealth in the United States.

Suzannah Herbert’s absorbing, at times gut punching, documentary Natchez is a story of who tells the tale.  Through 86 minutes the Memphis based director lets the camera roll on her subjects without interference or judgement.   What comes through in the film is a wide divergence of opinions, institutional denial, classism, race and contradictions. 

The first scene shows the real power in Natchez, The Women Garden Club’s gathering with the mayor.   The city’s main source of income is Heritage Tourism and tours. Tourists come to see and learn how the Pre-Civil War Southern Aristocrats lived. Hosts regale visitors with genteel ancestral tales of sitting in magnificently decorated parlors while eating tea cakes, sipping tea in flowy hoop skirts served by the “workers”.  The word “workers” is in the official script approved by the Garden Club. 

Rewritten

On the other side of the tracks, the guided tours tilt to the rawer but spellbinding side. Reverend Collins perhaps has fewer tours, because he tells the horrible tale of rape and daily degradation in the life of a slave and the aftermath of the institution to the disbelief of his clients.   For Collins, exposing the conscience cover up of the 400-year crime is the most important lesson for visitors.  The history of slavery has been rewritten depending on who you ask.

Rev Collins giving a tour in the film Natchez.

 The protagonists in Natchez view each other with mistrust.  Each representing a narrative.  As the tourist numbers and income fall, younger travellers are no longer interested in the “Gone with The Wind” romantic version of slavery Natchez finds itself at a crossroads. Either give a real accounting of how the city’s wealth built on cruelty or for stay with the same narrative yielding diminishing returns. 

Herbert’s slow build story telling ability works well. The contrasting views ranging from pride, dismissive, incendiary to wilful ignorance are handled without a judging eye even if audiences could have difficulty identifying with the figures on the screen concocting a fantasy lifestyle of 19th century Southern Culture.  This could have easily descended into comical vignettes, the filmmaker never loses her grip on the story.  The focus stays on the different interpretations of the American Story. 

Natchez does not pile on racial guilt or morality.  That is the charm, instead the film allows the audience to figure out the truth.

Screened online at the Tribeca Film Festival

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Diverse Films at Tribeca

As Tribeca Film Festival comes to an end, the diverse slate unspooling offered fun, vintage influences and the history of music from a certain area of New York.

Stay tuned for the reviews.

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Tribeca Film Festival Reviews

The 24h Tribeca Film Festival is underway. After many screeningsthere was funally time to write two reviews.

When there is Hollywood commercial weighted talent on the screen the expectations are high.  Bryce Dallas Howard, Orlando Bloom Ian McShane playing his normal menacing mobster in Tom Kingleys’s underworld fish out of water work Deep Cover never managed to click despite trying too hard.  From a script by Colin Trevorrow, Derek Connolly, Ben Ashenden and Alexander Owen, Deep Cover suffers from too many ideas in its brashy 100 min run.  Three misunderstood characters played by Howard, Bloom and Nick Mohammed get corralled into working for the London police as moles in the mafia. 

From improvision to a world of dark forces the trio confront Albanian drug lords, handle false grenades and guns all in the name of performing in character.

It’s difficult to combine the two elements as director Kingley attempts to weave a pace of comedy with risky tension.  There is the problem.  The failure of Deep Cover is the lack of both.

Are the Mitford sisters lives interesting or perplexing? Why did these ladies with the perfect pedigree make these choices?  Outrageous is the latest” Aristocraticplotation” from England complete with scenes in grand rooms, men dressed in black ties and ladies worrying about what to wear while toasting Champagne.   The lifestyles of the misunderstood gentry class. 

Outrageous on BritBox

A series from BBC’s BrixBox covers the book from Mary Lovell on the sibling’s chronicles in the 1930’s before the war.  Series creator Sarah Williams should be credited for trying to modernize the high society “rebels”.  Are the creative team behind Outrageous “Kardashianize” the Mitfords to appeal to a wider audience?  If reality tv existed eighty years ago these six offspring would have made great watching, each deserving her own season as a lead.  Yet, for some reason the latest tales of Nancy, Pamela, Diana, Unity, Jessica and Deborah in their dysfunctional aristocracy world is stale trying to disguise itself as modern mid-level art tv.

Screened online at the Tribeca Film Festival 2025.