Ross McElwee Movies
Ross McElwee took the basic precepts of
cinéma vérité and personalized them to create a unique form of documentary making that earned him much acclaim and several awards. His work is almost always autobiographical and he often films himself at some of life's most personal and awkward moments, though usually within the bounds of decency and good taste. Though there are many who feel his documentaries are too slow-paced, detailed, or abstract to be appreciated, there are an equal number of fans who love slowly being drawn more deeply into his world. The three feature films most representative of his style are also his most famous: Sherman's March: A Meditation on the Possibility of Romantic Love in the South During an Era of Nuclear Weapons Proliferation (more simply known as
Sherman's March),
Time Indefinite, and Backyard.
A native of Charlotte, NC, McElwee earned his bachelor's degree from Brown University and, a few years later, earned a master's in filmmaking from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he studied under
Richard Leacock, one of the pioneers of the
cinéma vérité movement. Between degrees, McElwee lived in Brittany, where he attempted and failed at various money-making schemes. He next lived in Paris; it was there, in the midst of trying to discern his niche in life, that he attended a showing of
Orson Welles'
Touch of Evil. The powerful drama inspired him to become a filmmaker. While growing up, he had wanted to become a writer and a photographer. During his studies at MIT, McElwee made a few short films, notably
Charleen (1978) and the medium-length documentary
Space Coast (1979). The former looked at the life of one of his most interesting friends, a charismatic school teacher. As with several other important people and family members, Charleen would put in regular appearances in his films, thereby creating an unforgettable portrait of the highs and lows of her life. The latter film examined the lives of three eccentric families who lived on Cape Canaveral in the late '70s. Backyard was filmed at his family home, as they carefully prepared to celebrate McElwee's brother's imminent departure to a prestigious medical school, and offers a look at a dying way of Southern life.
In March 1981, McElwee obtained a special grant and began a documentary travelogue that was originally to trace the route of the famed Yankee General across the South, but just before filming began, his girlfriend broke up with him. Devastated, he returned to his family home to regroup. It was his sister who suggested he use his camera to help him meet girls. He took it a few steps further and, over a five-month period, indeed retraced General Sherman's steps, but along the way, filmed his encounters with a half-dozen women, some of them old girlfriends and some of them strangers. The result was a funny, bittersweet study of romantic rejection punctuated by McElwee's periodic musings, spoken directly to the camera while he lay alone in various low-rent motels.
Sherman's March received wide theatrical distribution and was one of the most popular documentaries ever made.
Time Indefinite is almost a sequel to it and represents a more mature and structured film. It is a highly personal chronicle of McElwee's engagement and marriage to Marilyn Levine. In many ways, it marks McElwee's transition into adulthood, with all its responsibility. It is also a profound rumination on life and death, both occuring during the course of the film.
In addition to the aforementioned personal themes, McElwee's work concerns itself with larger issues, too. For example, one undercurrent running strongly through
Sherman's March is the fear and the threat of nuclear war that seems to subconsciously affect relationships between men and women. His Something to Do With the Wall (1991) looks at the lives of those living in the shadow of the Berlin Wall. In the late '90s, he was idly watching the evening news when he came upon the idea of documenting the long-term effects upon a few people who survived natural disasters and then described their experiences on television. The result was the provocative
Six O'Clock News (1997). ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

- 2011
- NR
- Add Photographic Memory to Queue
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Distressed over his teenaged son's addiction to the Internet and fearful that the developing boy has grown detached from the real world, documentary filmmaker Ross McElwee takes a journey back into his own adolescence by returning to St. Quay-Portrieux in Brittany, France, which he visited as a teen, and attempting to track down the photographer who gave him his first job, and the girl who once stole his heart. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- 2008
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Documentary filmmaker Ross McElwee, who has cast his quizzical eye on such phenomena as the Civil War, his problems with women and the American news media, now explores the high stakes of life in South America in the movie In Paraguay. McElwee and his wife Marilyn McElwee decided to adopt a child, and made arrangements to become new parents of a baby girl living in Paraguay. When the McElwees flew to Paraguay to meet the child and bring her home, they were struck by the extreme poverty around them, the bureaucracy that dogged them at every stage of the adoption process, and the corruption and oppression that dominates Paraguay's politics. While Ross initially intended to focus on the process of adopting his new daughter, before long his film became a study of a culture whose flaws are all but impossible for him to comprehend, while he also tries to record a bit of his daughter's heritage for her to look to in the future. In Paraguay was an official selection at the 2008 Venice Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- 2003
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- 2003
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Film diarist Ross McElwee (Sherman's March) offers another personal examination of Southern history and life with Bright Leaves, a documentary tracing his own connection to North Carolina and its tobacco industry. McElwee is drawn to the subject after meeting his second cousin John, a film memorabilia collector, who shows McElwee an old Warner Bros. film from 1950, Bright Leaf, in which Gary Cooper stars (alongside Patricia Neal and Lauren Bacall) as a tobacco magnate who builds himself up from nothing only to lose everything to a rich, powerful, and ruthless Southern gentleman. The film reminds McElwee of the stories his father used to tell about his great grandfather, who built up a fortune in the tobacco business, but spent years, and tens of thousands of dollars, suing the Duke family (the most powerful tobacco growers in American history, and founders of Duke University) for stealing his famous "Durham Bull" brand. The battle ruined him and left the family bankrupt. McElwee decides to investigate the origins of the film, which leads him to explore his own connection to the tobacco industry. Even though his family is no longer in the business, McElwee feels guilty about his family's "contribution to global tobacco addiction." McElwee interviews cancer patients, including former patients of his late father, a surgeon. He also interviews several friends who smoke or who have ties to the tobacco industry. In focusing on Bright Leaf, he finds himself interviewing film historian Vlada Petric and actress Neal. All of this is intertwined with a very personal family history involving his relationship with his father, his son, and the whole issue of smoking. ~ Josh Ralske, Rovi
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- 2002
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- 2002
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- 2002
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- 2002
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- 1997
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- 1997
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- Add Six O'Clock News to Queue
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Ross McElwee made the much-acclaimed autobiographical documentary Sherman's March. While watching television news reports of a hurricane's progress in South Carolina, he began to wonder how things were going for a friend of his, who lived in the path of the storm. His investigations led to the production of Six O'Clock News, in which he interrogates victims of natural disasters who have been made briefly famous by television news reports. Originally aired on PBS' "Frontline," in the documentary he interviews his South Carolina friend, who was recovering nicely, a couple whose trailer home was destroyed by a tornado, and an immigrant worker whose rescue after an L.A. earthquake was widely aired. In addition, he learns how to remove spoiled food from refrigerators that have been out of power for many days as a result of natural disasters. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- 1993
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The saga of Ross McElwee, filmmaker, continues with this almost-sequel to Sherman's March. The expat Southerner has finally managed to find a kindred soul to marry (another filmmaker, Marilyn Levene) and things seem to be going swimmingly. Then the couple are hit with a rapid-fire series of family tragedies that send McElwee into deep contemplation. Time Indefinite is a bittersweet journey, however, full of the self-deprecating humor and observational skill that made Sherman's March such a treat. The title is a phrase from the Bible, read aloud as part of a diatribe by a Jehovah's Witness at the door, which strikes Ross as particularly lovely. The third film of this (so far) trilogy is Six O'Clock News. ~ John Voorhees, Rovi
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- 1992
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Something To Do With the Wall began life in 1986 as a documentary about the 25th anniversary of the Berlin Wall. Filmmakers Ross McElwee and Marilyn Levine were still editing their film when, in 1989, the infamous Wall came down. McElwee and Levine returned to the site to film new scenes, and the result is this engaging "then and now" exercise. Having interviewed some of the more colorful and eccentric characters who habitually hung out around the Wall in 1986, the filmmakers bring them back before the camera to tell the world what they've been doing for the past three years. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1986
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A disarmingly engaging personal documentary, Sherman's March is a portrait of a man in personal crisis that is also an often hilarious ode to Southern women. Filmmaker Ross McElwee states in the film's opening shots that, as a native Southerner, he had always been fascinated with the psychological effect that Union General William Tecumseh Sherman has had on the region. To that end, he intended to make a film that would retrace the route of the general's famous march that brought so much devastation to the Confederacy, talking with contemporary Southerners about the Civil War. But just before he leaves his New York apartment to begin the shoot, McElwee learns that his girlfriend has left him, and his journey turns into one of self-examination through the women he encounters. Some are old friends -- the most memorable being Charleen Swansea, a teacher determined to find Ross a good woman -- and some are new acquaintances, including an aspiring actress and a survivalist. McElwee occasionally turns the camera on himself for late-night musings over the day's events. Sherman's March was a sleeper hit when it was released, and its reputation has grown with strong word of mouth. McElwee's next film Time Indefinite was also a personal story, about his own family, though with less of the ingratiating humor of Sherman's March. ~ Tom Wiener, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Ross McElwee

- 1984
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This is a documentary which takes a stab at a political statement with a personal undercurrent. Ross McElwee watches his small Southern town - family, friends, neighbors - through the eye of his camera and makes a photographic record of the interdependencies and segregations which have evolved from blacks and whites living together in the modern South. ~ Tana Hobart, Rovi
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- 1981
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- 1979
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Cape Canaveral in Florida (now Cape Kennedy) has long been the home of the U.S. space program. However, this documentary features a different kind of space, to wit: three "space cases," or highly eccentric people who lived near Cape Canaveral in the late 1970s. Each of them seems to present a bottomless well of oddities, beginning with "Papa John," a geriatric leader of a motorcycle gang who gives vent to his own personalized theology at a local church and also plays the piano there. Mary is a small-time local reporter who covers everything which is in the remotest way newsworthy on the NASA site, and she is busy trying to make a profit by recycling leftover space debris. Finally, Willy, an area businessman given to making racist statements, has a part-time job as a clown on a local children's TV show. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- 1978
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