Description
When a young white couple’s car breaks down after a weekend getaway, they’re helped by an older black man who inspires them with his creative wisdom. When they discover six months later that the words he spoke might not be his own, they’re horrified, fixating on his “crime” while forced to confront the originality of their own lives.
Statement
Written by James N. Kienitz Wilkins and Robin Schavoir, The Plagiarists is a dramatic comedy about the clash of money and culture, reality and desire, race and identity. It’s a social satire about who has the privilege to say what in today’s world.
It was conceived as a playful critique of the mannerisms of “indie film” used by aspiring filmmakers to denote authenticity of performance, often resulting in the casual perpetuation of stereotypes.
The Plagiarists is at once the thing it mimics: a completely independent microbudget feature shot entirely on vintage news cameras from the 1980s, despite a contemporary subject matter. The camera cited in the story is also the production camera, recording on real Betacam SP videotape (sourced from eBay) to create a visual style reflecting the internal debate over obsolescence, nostalgia, and the heavy weight of originality.
Reviews
New York Times Critic’s Pick! “Peter Parlow’s film deserves to be the summer’s art house conversation starter.”
—Glenn Kenny,New York Times
“The Plagiarists is an ode to how much can be done with very little. Parlow and his crew knock it out of the park.”
—Alex Saveliev, Film Threat
“The Plagiarists offers a hilarious and slyly withering appraisal of our contemporary creative economy.”
—Jordan Cronk, Film Comment
“Funny and Clever.”
—Alissa Wilkinson, VOX
“Rewarding as a meditation on the obstacles modern day artists must contend with when living paycheck to paycheck.”
—Matt Fagerholm, RogerEbert.com
“An intellectually ticklish, micro-budget, low-grade-video movie with metatextual wit to burn.”
—Jessica Kiang, Variety
“This rigorous film is concerned with questions of cultural appropriation and the very texture of life in our content-saturated present.”
—Carson Lund, Slant
Festivals
New Directors/New Films
Berlin International Film Festival: Forum
Sarasota Film Festival: Terry Porter Visionary Award
Chicago Underground Film Festival: William Greaves Award
Tacoma Film Festival
Milwaukee Film Festival
Viennale
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