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Streetwise / Tiny: The Life of Erin Blackwell (The Criterion Collection) [Blu-ray]
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| Genre | Special Interests |
| Format | Subtitled, Blu-ray |
| Contributor | Hellie, S., At, R., Ulu, L., McCall, Cheryl, Ewayne, D., Hadow, S., Mark, Mary Ellen, Bell, Martin, Blackwell, Erin, Im, K. See more |
| Language | English |
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An Oscar-nominated documentary and its long-awaited follow-up—two moving, frank looks at life on the margins
In 1983, director Martin Bell, photographer Mary Ellen Mark, and journalist Cheryl McCall set out to tell the stories of homeless and runaway teenagers living on the margins in Seattle. Streetwise follows an unforgettable group of kids who survive by hustling, panhandling, and dumpster diving. Its most haunting and enduring figure is iron-willed fourteen-year-old Erin Blackwell, a.k.a. Tiny; the project’s follow-up, Tiny: The Life of Erin Blackwell, completed thirty years later, draws on the filmmakers’ long relationship with their subject, now a mother of ten. Blackwell reflects with Mark on the journey they’ve experienced together, from Blackwell’s battles with addiction to her regrets to her dreams for her children, even as she sees them repeat her own struggles.
Taken together, the two films create a devastatingly frank, empathetic portrait of lost youth growing up far too soon in a world that has failed them, and of a family trying to break free of the cycle of trauma—as well as a summation of the life’s work of Mark, an irreplaceable artistic voice.
Director-Approved Special Edition Features
- New, restored high-definition digital transfer of Streetwise, supervised by director Martin Bell
- New audio commentary featuring Bell
- ew interview with Bell about photographer Mary Ellen Mark
- New interview with editor Nancy Baker
- And more
Product Description
In 1983, director Martin Bell, photographer Mary Ellen Mark, and journalist Cheryl McCall set out to tell the stories of homeless and runaway teenagers living on the margins in Seattle. Streetwise follows an unforgettable group of kids who survive by hustling, panhandling, and dumpster diving. Its most haunting and enduring figure is iron-willed fourteen-year-old Erin Blackwell, a.k.a. Tiny; the project’s follow-up, Tiny: The Life of Erin Blackwell, completed thirty years later, draws on the filmmakers’ long relationship with their subject, now a mother of ten. Blackwell reflects with Mark on the journey they’ve experienced together, from Blackwell’s battles with addiction to her regrets to her dreams for her children, even as she sees them repeat her own struggles. Taken together, the two films create a devastatingly frank, empathetic portrait of lost youth growing up far too soon in a world that has failed them, and of a family trying to break free of the cycle of trauma—as well as a summation of the life’s work of Mark, an irreplaceable artistic voice. DIRECTOR-APPROVED BLU-RAY SPECIAL EDITION FEATURES • New, restored high-definition digital transfers of both films, supervised by director Martin Bell, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack for Streetwise and 5.1 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack for Tiny: The Life of Erin Blackwell • New audio commentary on Streetwise featuring Bell • New interview with Bell about photographer Mary Ellen Mark • New interview with Streetwise editor Nancy Baker • Four short films by Bell • Trailer • English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing • PLUS: An essay by historian Andrew Hedden; journalist Cheryl McCall’s 1983 Life magazine article about teenagers living on the street in Seattle; and reflections on Blackwell written by Mark in 2015 Streetwise Seattle, 1983. Taking their camera to the streets of what was supposedly America’s most livable city, filmmaker Martin Bell, photographer Mary Ellen Mark, and journalist Cheryl McCall set out to tell the stories of those society had left behind: homeless and runaway teenagers living on the city’s margins. Born from a Life magazine exposé by Mark and McCall, Streetwise follows an unforgettable group of at-risk children—including iron-willed fourteen-year-old Tiny, who would become the project’s most haunting and enduring figure, along with the pugnacious yet resourceful Rat and the affable drifter DeWayne—who, driven from their broken homes, survive by hustling, panhandling, and dumpster diving. Granted remarkable access to their world, the filmmakers craft a devastatingly frank, nonjudgmental portrait of lost youth growing up far too soon in a world that has failed them. Tiny: The Life of Erin Blackwell In Tiny: The Life of Erin Blackwell, director Martin Bell and photographer Mary Ellen Mark draw on their thirty-year relationship with one of the most indelible subjects of Streetwise. Now a forty-four-year-old mother of ten, Erin Blackwell, a.k.a. Tiny, reflects with Mark on the journey they’ve experienced together, from Blackwell’s battles with addiction to her regrets to her dreams for her own children, even as she sees them being pulled down the same path of drugs and desperation that she was. Interweaving three decades’ worth of Mark’s photographs and footage that includes previously unseen outtakes from Streetwise, this is a heartrending, deeply empathetic portrait of a family struggling to break free of the cycle of trauma, as well as a summation of the life’s work of Mark, an irreplaceable artistic voice.
Product details
- MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
- Package Dimensions : 6.77 x 5.24 x 0.55 inches; 3.88 ounces
- Director : Bell, Martin, Mark, Mary Ellen, McCall, Cheryl
- Media Format : Subtitled, Blu-ray
- Release date : June 15, 2021
- Actors : Ewayne, D., Blackwell, Erin, Im, K., Ulu, L., Mark, Mary Ellen
- Studio : The Criterion Collection
- ASIN : B08Z2KM2ZW
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #43,065 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #159 in Special Interests (Movies & TV)
- Customer Reviews:
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Documentaries rarely come as harrowing as Martin Bell and Mary Ellen Mark’s Streetwise. Spinning off from a photo shoot Mark did for Life Magazine about street kids in Seattle, it is a time capsule of a city worlds away from, but also presaging, the Seattle of today. It is a peek at the early stages of a gentrification that allowed Seattle to go from humble fishing/factory town to prohibitively expensive tech bubble, and of who loses in that deal.
Streetwise was filmed in 1983, around the time that Seattle was increasingly being declared one of the most “livable” cities in the United States. Then as now, that meant a lot of (mostly white) yuppies moving in and pushing the city’s working class to the margins. With that comes economic strife, divorce, abuse, and indeed, a lot of runaway teens.
The wandering youth we see in Streetwise are, to varying degrees, victims of those circumstances. They are escapees from abusive or indifferent homes, who’ve decided a life of dumpster diving, squatting in abandoned motels, or turning to teenage sex work made more sense than whatever was happening in those homes.
The nearly four decades between the initial release of Streetwise and now has not muted its impact one iota. It’s still heartbreaking and infuriating, a beautiful piece of art about very difficult lives.
If Streetwise documents the dawn of Seattle’s yuppification, then Tiny: The Life of Erin Blackwell shows the result of three decades of fallout. Blackwell, a 14 year old sex worker in Streetwise, is the clear heart of that film, the camera inextricably drawn to her chattiness and wounded vulnerability. Mark and Bell maintained contact with, and continued to film, Blackwell in the ensuing years until Mark’s death in 2015; this feature-length film represents the most recent efforts, capturing Blackwell in her mid-40s.
By the time of Tiny, Blackwell is a mother of 10, living in the further-out suburbs of Seattle. Her kids are running into a lot of the same problems she did: drugs, illness, a little bit too much time in the street. There’s a lot of love in Tiny, but there’s also a lot of unresolved emotional trauma: Blackwell’s relationship with her children is often strained, her relationship with her mother still fraught with crackling tension. People of means might be able to better address the toxicity here, but absent the right medicine, one just ends up picking at scabs and never healing.
Neither Streetwise or Tiny quite qualify as agitprop: though intimate and caring, neither film amounts to a call to arms. Still, if you can walk away from these films not caring about what happens to the people in them, or other people like them, then you might have problems bigger than anything movies can solve.
Loads of great extras - all essential viewing.
I pray Erin her kids and grandchildren are well and I would love an updated on her daughter who overdosed and was in a coma I hope she recovers fully.
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