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The Arbor (2009)

The Arbor (2009)
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Andrea Dunbar was a British playwright whose work reflected the gritty realities of life in working-class Bradford, West Yorkshire. Dunbar knew of what she wrote -- she grew up in a Bradford housing project, had children by three different men, was a victim of domestic violence, and struggled with alcoholism before she died in 1990 when she was only 29. Andrea's daughter Lorraine Dunbar inherited her gift with language, but also her weaknesses; she also dealt with unhappy relationships with men, worked as a prostitute, became addicted to hard drugs, and served time for manslaughter when her two-year-old son died after drinking her methadone. Filmmaker Clio Barnard set out to tell the story of Andrea Dunbar's brief, troubled life and the neighborhood where she lived and wrote, and The Arbor is a unique mixture of documentary and narrative filmmaking. In addition to interviews with members of Andrea Dunbar's family and residents of Bradford's Buttershaw estates, where Dunbar's plays took place (which are lip-synched by actors to create a distancing effect), the film includes passages from Dunbar's first play, also called The Arbor, played out against the real-life locations where the story is set. The Arbor received its world premiere at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Director(s):
Clio Barnard
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of The Arbor

Andrea Dunbar was a British playwright whose work reflected the gritty realities of life in working-class Bradford, West Yorkshire. Dunbar knew of what she wrote -- she grew up in a Bradford housing project, had children by three different men, was a victim of domestic violence, and struggled with alcoholism before she died in 1990 when she was only 29. Andrea's daughter Lorraine Dunbar inherited her gift with language, but also her weaknesses; she also dealt with unhappy relationships with men, worked as a prostitute, became addicted to hard drugs, and served time for manslaughter when her two-year-old son died after drinking her methadone. Filmmaker Clio Barnard set out to tell the story of Andrea Dunbar's brief, troubled life and the neighborhood where she lived and wrote, and The Arbor is a unique mixture of documentary and narrative filmmaking. In addition to interviews with members of Andrea Dunbar's family and residents of Bradford's Buttershaw estates, where Dunbar's plays took place (which are lip-synched by actors to create a distancing effect), the film includes passages from Dunbar's first play, also called The Arbor, played out against the real-life locations where the story is set. The Arbor received its world premiere at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
95 mins

Complete Cast of The Arbor


Director(s):
Clio Barnard
Writer(s):
Clio Barnard
Producer(s):
Tracy O'Riordan
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR(Adult Situations, Drug Content, Sexual Situations)
Categories:
DocumentaryForeign
The Arbor Awards:
  • 2011 - L.A. Film Critics Association - Best Documentary (Runner-up)
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    Member Reviews
     
    Keith G.

    UK playwright Andrea Dunbar, was discovered at an early age in housing projects known as ˜The Arbor, where she wrote of the alcoholism and family decay around her. The film uses 2 extraordinary devices,. First, scenes from her plays are staged in open lawn areas of the real life Arbor, so we see a fight taking place in a living room at night acted out on the grass in broad daylight, surreally, watched by presumably the neighborhood people still struggling under the same conditions. Over time, it brought home that Dunbar"s works represented real people, lives, and pain. The second, even more audacious move, is to have all the interviews with the real participants acted out by professional actors lip-syncing recordings. Simultaneously dreamy and like a memory, but in some way more real than if the actors simply used their own voices. A very moving film that is heroic enough in its bravery that it more than overcomes the occasional misstep.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Betty O.

    Can't recommend this one!!!!!

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    Mary Paisley W.

    If you want to be DEPRESSED, watch this movie. If you love reading SUBTITLES because the lower-class English accent is so heavy, rent this. If you want to see the lowest common denominator of humanity, rent this movie! It's so bad, NO STARS!

    Yes   |   No

     
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