BOMBAY BEACH

penwith film society
directed by: 
Alma Har'el
with: 
Benny Parrish, Pamela Parrish, Mike Parrish, Doran "Red" Furgie, Cedric Thompson

The rusting relic of a failed 1950s development boom, the Salton Sea is a barren Californian landscape often seen as a symbol of the failure of the American Dream. A sea in the middle of the Colorado desert.

True to her roots as a photographer, video artist, and music video director, Alma Har'el crafts an adamantly atypical and artistically innovative film telling the story of of three protagonists: Benny Parrish, a young boy diagnosed with bipolar disorder whose troubled soul and vivid imagination create both suffering and joy for him and his complex and loving family. CeeJay Thompson, a black teenager and aspiring football player who has taken refuge in Bombay Beach hoping to avoid the same fate of his cousin who was murdered by a gang of youths in Los Angeles. And that of Red, an ancient survivor, once an oil field worker, living on the fumes of whiskey, cigarettes and an irrepressible love of life.

Tribeca Film Festival World Documentary Competition Award Winner
Review by Take One on 18 Sep 2011 Somewhere in the desert east of Los Angeles, sitting on the edge of a great lake, lies the small town of Bombay Beach. Once a flourishing tourist destination, it has become a desolate and ramshackle place where a group of inhabitants are caught in a void of rural life. Supported by the perfectly apt music of Bob Dylan and Beirut, this quirky little documentary follows the everyday life of some of these people, in what could only be described as a bizarre existence that they lead: a family whose parents have served jail-time, their children taken away from them twice in the past; a former LA gang-land member who is courting his best friend’s sister and aiming for a scholarship to go to college; and a group of elderly people airing their naïve ways and wisdom. Indeed, this is where the film successfully finds its heart – in the humanity that emerges in a culture so distant from our own, stuck in a limbo between the simple, yet paranoid era of 1950s America and today’s modern times. Director Alma Har’el makes the ordinary become extraordinary, the film is captivating throughout. The filmmaking is unobtrusive, becoming invisible as it silently watches the everyday nothing that fills the lives of the subjects, catching some truly astonishing moments. To some this will be a comedy, to others a drama, perhaps an exposé or even a horror film – but nonetheless, this is a film that truly shows that truth is stranger than fiction. Mike Boyd
TVBOMB Life below the poverty line is the subject of Alma Har’el’s Bombay Beach, a documentary that takes place in the Californian desert, which is also the home of the artificial Salton Sea, which is in the middle of the desert, and also happens to be one of the poorest regions in the USA. Set in contemporary Bombay Beach and the surrounding areas, the film follows Red, a man in his nineties, Ceejay, a teenager sent to the area to escape the violence of LA, and Benny, a hyperactive young boy, who is struggling to be heard in an ever-increasing family as they live their lives in one of the US’ poorest towns. The concept of the Californian desert sustaining a volatile sea seems completely unnatural, and it’s a thought that’s only strengthened by the film’s analysis of the lives of the people that find themselves living in this inhospitable place. While the Salton Sea was once a popular holiday destination for the rich and the famous, this film reveals the extent of the pollution and poverty that has destroyed this area, whilst showcasing the inhabitants’ sense of hope and survival. By following the three very different subjects, the film unearths a bleak picture of modern America from the eyes of those most maligned by society, the poor, the elderly, and the young child who are united in the sense that they are outsiders. This sense of togetherness, and of community gives Bombay Beach its appeal, because it shows a group of people in desperate circumstances who have an incredible support network. Touching, funny, and featuring some impressive choreography, Har’el’s Bombay Beach is an endearing and standout documentary on poverty that shows the very real cost of being poor.
Sunday 15th April
Savoy, Penzance
Monday 16th April
Savoy, Penzance
Tuesday 17th April
Royal, St Ives
Wednesday 18th April
Royal, St Ives
Israel, USA
2011
80 Min

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