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  • The 'Buzz' on screenwriter is good

    The 'Buzz' on screenwriter is good
    By Bob Strauss, Film Critic

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    Aug. 25, 2006

    Albert "Buzz" Bezzerides wrote some of the more flavorful films of
    the 1940s and '50s, Nicholas Ray's primal "On Dangerous Ground" and
    the noir apocalypse adaptation of Mickey Spillane's "Kiss Me Deadly"
    among them.

    The subject of the documentary "Buzz" was also Humphrey Bogart and
    Robert Mitchum's favorite dialogue doctor. And he was pals with
    much-better-known authors William Faulkner and William Saroyan,
    among others.

    Additionally, at age 98, the Turkey-born, Fresno-raised son of a Greek
    father and Armenian mother is still kicking around his ramshackle
    Woodland Hills home, shouting like any screenwriter worth his salt
    about how Hollywood screwed him. With missing teeth and sheepdog
    eyebrows, Buzz still nurtures the sharp, critical view of the world
    that informed his best books and scripts - and even at his most
    nostalgic moments disdains sentimentality like a cancer. It's a ball
    listening to him gripe.

    Two hours of it, though, is a bit much. And Greek director Spiro N.
    Taraviras doesn't present his material in anything like a scintillating
    manner. He makes the crucial mistake of going in straight chronological
    order, and there really isn't very much interesting about Bezzerides'
    immigrant background or college days at the University of California
    at Berkeley. He would've been better, perhaps, to revisit that stuff
    after focusing on some of Buzz's movieland adventures, which cover
    the gamut from run-ins with moguls to fighting for story integrity
    (and usually losing) to the fear and loathing of the anti-communist
    witch hunts.

    Apparently unable to access (or afford) actual footage from films such
    as "They Drive by Night" and "Track of the Cat," Taraviras treats us to
    their vintage theatrical trailers instead. This doesn't give us much
    sense of Bezzerides' fine writing, but boy, were those things sexy
    as all get-out. Ever wanted to know why they call them teasers? This
    movie shows you.

    Beside the always-entertaining Buzz, Taraviras interviews some actors
    he wrote for (Cloris Leachman, Terry Moore, Gloria Stuart) and director
    Jules Dassin, himself 95 and an Athens-based expatriate since the
    blacklist days. Friends, relatives and, of course, enthusiastic
    European critics contribute their views. The talking heads are
    broken up by unimaginative establishing shots of both San Francisco
    (Golden Gate Bridge, cable cars) and SoCal (palm-lined boulevards,
    Griffith Observatory).

    But we sure get what makes Buzz distinctive: an unshakable belief
    that the rich and powerful will always cheat the average guy, and
    he crankily considers himself one of the latter to this day. Along
    with being a respectful portrait of an amusing, singular talent,
    the film also, by extension, fights the good fight for all of the
    overlooked creative types whose work make movies great while a few
    big names grab all the credit.

    BUZZ
    Our rating:
    (Not rated: language)
    Director: Spiro N. Taraviras.

    Running time: 1 hr. 58 min.

    Playing: Laemmle Fairfax, Los Angeles.

    In a nutshell: Biography of 98-year-old screenwriter Albert "Buzz"
    Bezzerides is often fascinating.
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