TEENAGE

Showings

Roxie Theatre Sun, Feb 9, 2014 7:01 PM
Roxie Theatre Wed, Feb 12, 2014 7:01 PM
New Parkway Thu, Feb 20, 2014 7:00 PM
Film Info
Director:Matt Wolf
Film Category:Documentary
Running Time:78
Country:USA
Year of Release:2013

Description

“It’s a stylish, freewheeling and fun ride, buoyed by an astounding score from Deerhunter front-man Bradford Cox…” (Indiewire)

'Teenagers' didn't always exist. In this living collage of rare archival material, filmed portraits, and voices lifted from early 20th century diary entries, a struggle erupts between adults and adolescents to define a new idea of youth. Before the ‘Teenager’ was invented, there was no second stage of life. You were either a child or you went to work as an adult. At the turn of the century, child labor was ending, ‘adolescence’ was emerging, and a struggle erupted between adults and youth. Would the young be controlled and regimented, or could they be free?

The new film from director Matt Wolf (Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell) inspired by punk author Jon Savage’s book, Teenage gives voice to young people from the first half of the 20th century in America, England, and Germany--- from party-crazed Flappers and hip Swing Kids to zealous Nazi Youth and frenzied Sub-Debs. By the end of World War II, they were all ‘Teenagers’.

Four young voices (Jena Malone, Ben Whishaw, Julia Hummer, Jessie Usher) bring to life rare archival material and filmed portraits of emblematic teenagers from history--- Brenda Dean Paul, a self-destructive Bright Young Thing; Melita Maschmann, an idealistic Hitler Youth; Tommie Scheel, a rebellious German Swing Kid; and Warren Wall, a black Boy Scout – all punctuated by a contemporary score by Bradford Cox (Deerhunter, Atlas Sound).

Teenage is a story that ends with a beginning: a prelude to today's youth culture. In each generation, adults often mistake youthful unrest for an emotional rite of passage. But history proves that rebelling teenagers aren't just claiming their independence, they're shaping the future.



-Kier-la Janisse