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Following Sean (2004)

Following Sean (2004)
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A child's perspective on the Haight-Ashbury counterculture of the 1960s informs filmmaker Ralph Arlyck's film concerning the perceptive and precocious four-year-old and his unique perspective on the chaos that was sweeping a nation. A student at San Francisco State University at the time when police in riot gear flooded the campus and revolutionary-minded idealists waxed poetic in the streets, Ralph Arlyck was befriended by a young boy named Sean who would occasionally come down from his mother's top-floor apartment to chat with the various inhabitants of the come-one-come-all commune. When Arlyck one day decided to turn on his camera during one of young Sean's frequent visits, the images and thoughts Arlyck captured on film would perfectly encapsulate the dying innocence of the era. Now, 30 years later and generations removed from that tumultuous time, Arlyck returns to San Francisco to seek out Sean and find out just what became of the barefoot four-year-old whose strange mix of childlike wonder and worldly viewpoints gave curious birth to a new hope for the future of a country on the brink. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Director(s):
Ralph Arlyck
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Following Sean

A child's perspective on the Haight-Ashbury counterculture of the 1960s informs filmmaker Ralph Arlyck's film concerning the perceptive and precocious four-year-old and his unique perspective on the chaos that was sweeping a nation. A student at San Francisco State University at the time when police in riot gear flooded the campus and revolutionary-minded idealists waxed poetic in the streets, Ralph Arlyck was befriended by a young boy named Sean who would occasionally come down from his mother's top-floor apartment to chat with the various inhabitants of the come-one-come-all commune. When Arlyck one day decided to turn on his camera during one of young Sean's frequent visits, the images and thoughts Arlyck captured on film would perfectly encapsulate the dying innocence of the era. Now, 30 years later and generations removed from that tumultuous time, Arlyck returns to San Francisco to seek out Sean and find out just what became of the barefoot four-year-old whose strange mix of childlike wonder and worldly viewpoints gave curious birth to a new hope for the future of a country on the brink. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Director(s):
Ralph Arlyck
Writer(s):
Ralph Arlyck
Producer(s):
Ralph ArlyckMalcolm Pullinger
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    Member Reviews
     
    Keith G.

    Understated thoughtful documentary about different recent generations in America, and how their politics and upbringings intermeshed and evolved. As a film student in 1969 Ralph Arylck made a 15 minute short about a bright 4 year old boy who lived upstairs with hippie parents in Haight-Asbury. 4 year old Sean had tried pot, refused to wear shoes, etc. Now Arlyck sets out to find out what happened to Sean 30+ years later – was he a mess as some predicted? Had his upbringing left him free as others hoped? Of course the answer is far more gray and complex. And in examining Sean and his family, film-maker Arlyck also looks at his own. A quiet film, not deeply emotional, but a very interesting and worthy essay about parental ideals, family, and life.

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    Patrick R.

    Vivid yet down to earth presentation of different people of different generations showing one thing in common - growing up, growing up to understand life as he/she understands life to be, and growing up to take responsibility for oneself and family! Arlyck's brilliance is richly embedded in the film's totally unpretentious yet captivating sequence of scenes and narrations. The film is without an underlying intention, advocation, or even a suggestion. Yet, it leaves you with an awe. It pulled me out of all the insanity of the day's toil.

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    Mike C.

    Begining... Middle...End ... What a great all around movie. Growing up in Los Angeles and being in Jr High in the 60's I heard often of San Francisco and what was going on. Thanks for making this indie available.

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