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July 24, 2010

Life During Wartime

Filed under: Movies, Movies online, Release — Tags: , , , , , , — admin @ 10:39 am

Life During Wartime (2010) Poster

Follows a group of people struggling to find a place for themselves in an unpredictable and volatile world. The past haunts the present and imperils the future: ghosts circle and loom, trouble and console. The question of forgiveness and its limits threads throughout a series of intersecting love stories, offering clarity and possibly alternatives to the comforts of forgetting.

Also Known As:
Forgiveness
Life During Wartime
The New Todd Solondz Film
Untitled (Todd Solondz Project)
Untitled Todd Solondz Film
Production Status: In Production/Awaiting Release
Genres: Drama
Running Time: 1 hr. 36 min.
Release Date: July 23rd, 2010 (limited)
MPAA Rating: Not Rated
Distributors:
IFC Films
Production Co.:
Werc Werk Works, Evamere Entertainment
Filming Locations:
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Produced in: United States

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By Kam Williams

Non-Profit Doc Recounts Battle over Billion-Dollar Art Collection

Starting in the early 20th Century, Dr. Albert C. Barnes (1872-1951) began quietly amassing a priceless art collection which included hundreds of pieces by Van Gogh, Renoir, Cezanne, Picasso, Matisse and other emerging masters at a time well before they became household names in the United States. This enterprising art enthusiast purchased their unappreciated works for a relative pittance during visits to Europe underwritten with money made from a patent he developed for preventing gonorrhea blindness in newborns.

In 1922, he opened the Barnes Foundation in suburban Philadelphia, an unpretentious museum/school designed with aspiring young artists and working-class patrons in mind, two groups then generally shunned by the elitist art world. In fact, Barnes himself was dismissed as a dilettante with bad taste by the critics, a snub he would never forget or forgive.

However, the art establishment would belatedly acknowledge Dr. Barnes’ uncanny eye for treasures, and come to covet his collection, when its value grew to over $25 billion. Still, at the end of his life, he would leave his estate to Lincoln University, an unheralded historically black college, instead of passing it on to a mainstream institution likely to turn his unpretentious all-embracing oasis of tolerance into an exclusive enclave.

This bequest ignited a firestorm of controversy, as powerful politicians and mainstream museum directors immediately started scheming to wrest control of the Barnes from the little black college which had been named the beneficiary of its founder’s will. That protracted legal battle is the subject of The Art of the Steal, a fascinating documentary recounting how a combination of racism, arrogance and shady shenanigans enabled a group of entitled crooks in philanthropists’ clothing to pull off a billion-dollar heist, thereby frustrating the last wishes of a true champion of the people.

A tragic, true tale exposing America’s ugly, two-tiered system of justice defined by the color line.

Excellent (4 stars)

Unrated

Running time: 101 minutes

Studio: IFC Films/MPI Home Video

DVD Extras: Theatrical trailer.

To order a copy of on DVD, visit: B003JHXS1E

To see a trailer for, visit:

Kam Williams is a syndicated film and book critic who writes for 100+ publications. He is a member of the New York Film Critics Online, the African-American Film Critics Association, and the NAACP Image Awards Nominating Committee. Contact him through NewsBlaze.

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