FILM REVIEW
Young Chang
Tobias Schneebaum has the best documentary voice -- I’ll give him
that. He talks with a hip sort of flatness, like he is bored to death
with his own words, which makes his sometimes surprising details about
traveling to the jungles of Peru sound that much cooler.
But did he keep his viewer for all of 93 minutes? I wandered, a couple
times.
“Keep the River on Your Right: A Modern Cannibal Tale,” follows
Schneebaum, a 78-year-old gay, Jewish, New York artist with Parkinson’s
disease as he returns to Asmat and other areas of Peru where he had lived
for seven months about 45 years ago.
Part of him doesn’t want to go back and face the pain of having
engaged in cannibalism with certain tribes -- something he hasn’t really
gotten over. He is sad to think he will have to part from his Peruvian
lover and friend a second time -- a male who had multiple male as well as
female partners, as was the culture in Asmat.
But he does -- he returns to South America from his New York life --
narrating all the way through.
Produced by Peter Broderick and directed by Laurie Gwen and David
Shapiro, the documentary is innovative but, at times, too slow. The
scenery is beautiful, but too much of it is shown. The various interviews
are interesting, but perhaps not all necessary.
* “Keep the River on Your Right: A Modern Cannibal Tale” will screen
at 4 p.m. Tuesday at Edwards Island 7 Cinemas.
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