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Movie Review: Buzz

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  • Movie Review: Buzz

    Los Angeles Times, CA
    Aug. 25, 2006


    MOVIE REVIEW
    'Buzz'
    Shining a strong light on Hollywood, American history.


    By Carina Chocano, Times Staff Writer


    A.I. Bezzerides, Buzz to his friends, had a long, fruitful writing
    career in the 1940s and '50s, churning out pulp novels and scripts
    for film noir classics such as "On Dangerous Ground" and "Kiss Me
    Deadly." Yet, like many screenwriters, he remains mostly unknown
    today. Spiro N. Taraviras' documentary "Buzz" chronicles the life of
    a tireless worker of the Hollywood "dream factory" of the middle of
    the last century, weaving it together with stories about the
    working-class experience, labor practices and the Hollywood
    blacklist.

    The son of Armenian refugees, Bezzerides grew up poor in Fresno,
    where he was friendly with writer William Saroyan. After attending UC
    Berkeley, he wrote a novel about long-haul truckers that would later
    be adapted into the Humphrey Bogart early noir classic "They Drive by
    Night." Warner Bros. had already adapted the novel and begun
    production before securing the rights from Bezzerides, which put him
    in a good position to negotiate. But rather than risk his
    relationship with the studio, Bezzerides' agent accepted a tiny sum
    on his behalf. Thus began a long line of bad deals that marked the
    writer's career. Despite his productivity and success, Bezzerides
    never achieved any measure of financial stability, even after
    creating the hit TV series "The Big Valley" in the 1960s.

    Taraviras spent four years interviewing 98-year-old Bezzerides in his
    tumbledown Woodland Hills home, in which he recounts anecdotes from a
    remarkable life that included friendships with William Faulkner and
    Marilyn Monroe.

    The film also includes numerous interviews with actors and directors
    who worked with him (including Jules Dassin, who decamped for Europe
    to avoid being subpoenaed by the House Un-American Activities
    Committee and remains there to this day), as well as his children,
    journalists and film historians.

    The result is an insightful look at a remarkable behind-the-scenes
    life and slice of American and Hollywood history. Told from an
    outsider's perspective, it sheds light on the workings of a glamorous
    but often treacherous business.


    'Buzz'

    MPAA rating: PG-13 for brief strong language

    An Outsider Release. Writer-producer-director Spiro N. Taraviras.

    Running time: 1 hour, 58 minutes.

    Exclusively at Laemmle's Fairfax Cinemas, 7907 Beverly Blvd. at
    Fairfax Avenue, L.A. (323) 655-4010.
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