Something has happened to PBS favorite "Charlie Rose." The erudite conversations and sober intellectualism have been replaced by an absurd world where illogic, inane dialogues, and open hostility r...
Something has happened to PBS favorite "Charlie Rose." The erudite conversations and sober intellectualism have been replaced by an absurd world where illogic, inane dialogues, and open hostility rule. The one-on-one interview between Charlie and his guest begins as usual but quickly goes awry, so much so that Charlie is warned that, somewhere, a man named "Steve" is "not happy." But who is "Steve" and why is he angry? And why does the mere mention of his name stop Charlie cold? Using appropriated footage from a single episode of "Charlie Rose," filmmaker Andrew Filippone Jr. creates something both disturbing and farcical in "'Charlie Rose' by Samuel Beckett."
A "Rolling Stone" magazine "Top 10" (May 15, 2008).
Featured in "New York" magazine's "Approval Matrix" (May 5, 2008).
WINNER: Best Experimental Film at the 2008 Artsfest Film Festival
SCREENINGS: Chicago & Boston Underground Film Festivals; LIVE! at the New York Public Library
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it does take a genius to single having such a brilliant understanding for comic timing and to write one of the most influential plays in the 'theater of the Absurd' genre to date. Yes Samuel Beckett is a genius
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Nothing to be done.
Should we wait?
Nothing to be done.
We'll wait.
So Waiting for Godot! =D
BROOD!