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2002
Great Lakes Independent Film Festival
Resin
Category:
Narrative Feature 1hr 27min
Director: Vladimir Gyorski
The 23rd certified Dogma
film deals with the injustices of the malicious
American legal system, especially
as it relates to the so-called "war" on
drugs; in this respect, it blows the comparatively
childish Traffic right out of the bong water. The
story concerns the aimless Zeke (David Alvarado),
a genial vagabond and small-scale pot dealer, who
through a chain of unfortunate events becomes embroiled
in a legal nightmare of Kafkaesque proportions. Accosted
by a group of drunken frat boys, he defends himself
with a skateboard and is charged with assault. When
he's busted for pot for the second time in two months,
Zeke finds himself subject to California's controversial "three-strikes" law
and faces a life sentence—something he is clearly
unable to serve.
The Dogma Vow of Chastity, considered
by some to be a coy marketing tool, works staggeringly
well
to ratchet up Resin's level of realism, already
well established by the manner in which the filmmakers
capture the low-key ambiance of Zeke's Santa Barbara
community. Shooting with a digital, handheld camera
and using only natural light, this vérité-style
drama builds to a fascinating, tension-filled legal
Catch-22—real prosecutors, district attorneys
and judges lend an unmistakable authenticity to the
fatalistic proceedings. Even more staggering is the
understanding that Zeke's story is typical in California,
where there are more than 3,000 nonviolent offenders
currently serving 25 years to life for minor felonies.
© GLFA
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