Graffiti Artist (The)
- Director: James Bolton
- Writer: James Bolton
- Producer: James Bolton
CGiii Comment
23 minutes plus before any proper dialogue is spoken - and, when it comes, it really wasn't worth waiting for...deliver a killer line!!!
The music is utterly grating.
The art? What art, mere scribbles.
There was an opportunity for greatness here - paddling in puddles, no nerve, no danger.
Bolton: throw yourself into the deep end. Challenge yourself!
Sadly disappointing..
Trailer...
The(ir) Blurb...
Adrift in a lush, nocturnal urban landscape, Nick is a post-modern urban hero asserting his anarchistic agenda on the endless maze of virgin exterior walls that comprise downtown Seattle and Portland. For writer/director Bolton's lonely "tagger" protagonist, the vast wall surfaces of deserted alleys and trainyards are at once a daunting symbol of capitalist oppression and a texturally rich, seamless tableau ripe for exploitation to amplify his artistic dialectic of anger and rebellion. His own virtually anonymous existence seemingly only secondary to the painted surfaces and "rupture the system" manifesto which more poignantly evidence his presence, Nick's prodigious solo graffiti output is interrupted by friendship with another young tagger. Their communication begins as less verbal than a kind of shared graphic tour de force; their enormous collaborative graffiti murals appear to emerge as the unmistakable offspring of their kindred spirit.
Cast & Characters
Ruben Bansie-Snellman as Nick;
Pledgure Duoshun as Hardware Stock Clerk;
Zachary S. Smalls as Police Officer #1; R
obert D. Heath Jr. as Police Officer #2;
Rich Clemets as Booking Officer;
Rich Carlton as Skate Shop Clerk;
Pepper Fajans as Jesse;
Daniel Parker as Boy at Burnside Skate Park;
Luke Cook as Boy at Burnside Skate Park;
Dan Stegner as Boy at Burnside Skate Park;
Justin Lawrence as Undercover Cop #1;
John Paulson as Undercover Cop #2;
Megan Johnston as Smoothie Shop Girl;
Don Connell as Hardware Store Clerk;
Angie Golds as End Police Officer #2