| Bright Leaves |
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| Written by Michelle Haimoff | |
| Thursday, 26 July 2007 | |
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In a way, for me, it’s the worst of both fates. I mean, without reaping any of the financial rewards, I’m free to feel all the guilt I want over the fact that my grandfather, in helping to launch the tobacco industry down here, probably made some measurable contribution to global tobacco addiction. McElwee shows how the Dukes have contributed to this addiction with interviews of lung cancer patients in the region, and how they’ve tried to compensate for their damages with the Smoking Cessation Clinic at Duke University Medical Center, where these patients are treated. There is clearly a disconnect when it comes to tobacco, not only in the minds of the Duke family, but also in the minds of tobacco farmers who see their product as innocuous. Robbie Jackson, a farmer whose mother died of lung cancer, says: My growing tobacco has nothing to do with my mother dying. It has nothing to do with anyone that dies. In tracing the history of North Carolina tobacco manufacturing, McElwee spends a considerable amount of time examining the 1950 film “Bright Leaf,” starring Lauren Bacall, Gary Cooper and Patricia Neal. Convinced that the movie is based on his grandfather, John Harvey McElwee’s rivalry with Washington Duke, he interviews the screenwriter’s elderly widow, but she denies any parallels. McElwee loses focus temporarily when he also interviews Patricia Neal, who is visiting North Carolina for a film festival. His questions to her focus exclusively on her relationship with Gary Cooper, which, while potentially interesting, are irrelevant to the documentary. It’s a shame that McElwee gets so sidetracked by the Hollywood version of the story, especially since, with slaves featured in almost every scene, the Hollywood version is not a particularly PC choice. However, despite its digressions, McElwee takes a genuine interest in the people and addiction that characterize his hometown. One that is sympathetic too, considering that McElwee himself is a former smoker who longs for the nicotine feeling that “time had stopped and time would go on forever.” Comments
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written by Jack Hudson , August 08, 2007
I agree the Patricia Neal part goes nowhere...it's the smoking part of Bright Leaves that is more interesting. For instance, his friends who keep vowing to quit, and then months later, are seen puffing away again. And the fields of green tobacco. It makes smoking look seductive, confusing, and deadly -- something people aren't really set up to deal with. Like lots of other things in modern life.
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