Be sure to also catch Sherman's March from Ross McElwee playing in the Dundee microcinema July 24–30! Note, watching Sherman's March before watching Remake is not necessary to enjoy this film. However, it makes the viewing experience of Remake both funnier and more heartbreaking when viewed beforehand.
Film Information
Filmmaker Ross McElwee has spent forty years recording himself and his family, creating documentaries that chronicle the shifting contours of American society through the lens of personal history. His son Adrian grew up inside those films, and eventually began experimenting with the camera himself. When a Hollywood producer acquires the rights to adapt McElwee's 1986 breakthrough Sherman's March into a work of fiction, twenty-year-old Adrian sees a chance for his father to finally reach a wider audience.
As the adaptation stalls, Adrian gets swept into a deepening drug addiction and dies from a fentanyl overdose, leaving behind hours of personal video footage. Retracing Adrian’s final years, McElwee reckons with what his camera captured and what remained hauntingly out of frame. As he reflects on a lifetime behind the camera, Ross’s own effort to remix and remake the movie that Adrian never got to finish takes on new significance. An ever-expanding hall of mirrors built from decades of home movies, Remake is both McElwee's attempt to hold onto his son, and to let him go.
Reviews
"similar to other recent personal films, like Blue Heron and Romería, McElwee’s documentary readily accepts that a movie alone cannot fill the void left by loss or redo the many decisions made along the way. It can only ease the lived present by revisiting the recorded past, allowing time to stop, kindly but briefly." –Roger Ebert


