| Slam | |||
| There has been considerable interest in New York documentary director
Marc Levin's debut dramatic feature, Slam, since Levin won top honours
at Sundance this year. "It was a big surprise considering that we submitted
a rough-cut three weeks late on VHS," Levin says of the Sundance award.
"Even getting in was a shock."
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Set in Washington DC, Slam tells the story of Ray Joshua (Saul Williams), an original, gifted rapper/poet trapped in a war zone housing project known as Dodge City. When Ray is arrested on a petty drug charge, he is sucked into the black hole of DC's criminal justice system. While there, he finds his salvation in Lauren Bell (Sonja Sohn), a beautiful writing teacher who helps him to understand and cultivate his skills. Using his wits and his dazzling verbal talents as weapons against the brutality of his forced surroundings, Ray learns to survive both in and out of jail. Through his words he finds freedom in his mind despite his circumstance and gives voice to the pain of his lost generation. Slam builds its central idea around a phenomenon that is prevalent in
the East Coast of the United States, known as 'slamming'. "In the spoken
word/poetry circle, they have these things called slams, where poets get
up for a given amount of time, say three minutes, they do a piece and there
are judges in the audience," Levin explains. "It's half circus atmosphere,
with people yelling and screaming for what they like, and half serious.
It's an entertaining way of presenting poetry, from street rap to things
much more sophisticated."
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Much of the film was shot on location in a prison in Washington DC, one of the rare occasions that the American capital was utilised to highlight the enormous crime rate prevalent in that city. Levin's past experience as a documentary director brings a tone of authenticity and truth to Slam, coupled with its raw, cinema verite style, sharp dialogue and the use of poetry. The two lead actors both contributed to the film's collaboratively written script. As a result of its reception at Sundance, the film has been picked up
for US distribution by Trimark Pictures, which is also handling international
sales at Cannes, with the film having recently been sold to France. Levin
is optimistic that, despite difficulties with Black American cinema, Slam
will find a broad audience. "I guess that's what we'll find out at Cannes.
However, the fact that hip-hop music has become a global youth culture,
I think, is in our favour, because the world in which this film is set
is a world inhabited now by kids that don't even speak English, from those
in Japan to Russia. Those kids know the likes of Tupak – this is the world
youth culture. So that's a major plus. Yes it's parochial, but it is also
like going to the source of where the creativity, energy and personalities
come that are feeding a global youth language and market. Also, it's a
film about a poet and artist, so I think it reaches a kind of European
sensibility, that the artist is the real hero." Paul Fischer |
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| FILM CREDITS | |
| Producer | Henri M Kessler, David Peipers, Richard Stratton, Marc Levin |
| Director | Marc Levin |
| Screenplay | Marc Levin, Bonz Malone, Richard Stratton, Saul Williams, Sonja Sohn |
| Editor | Emir Lewis |
| Music | DJ Spooky, Paul Miller |
| Cast | Saul Williams, Sonja Sohn, Bonz Malone, Beau Sia |
| Running Time | 100 mins |
| International Sales | Mars Films |