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Name of Film:
Same River Twice
Our Rating:
Documentary, 78 min, Color
In 1978 as the Age of Aquarius neared exhaustion after a decade-long overdose of sex, drugs, and rock and roll, a group of seventeen friends decided to take one last trip down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon. For 35 days they lived communally, discarded their clothes, shared some drugs and each other, and created a great memory.
One of the seventeen who made the trip was future documentary filmmaker Rob Moss, who used his new 16mm movie camera to record the experience.
Moss did not return to the river again until 2000. He said he realized how much he and the world had changed since that trip of twenty years earlier, and how much a part of him yearned for those simpler joys, and truths, of his youth. He wondered if others in the group felt the same, so he decided to track down several friends who had participated on the earlier trip and to document what their lives were like now.
The results became The Same River Twice, an 80-minute documentary that became the darling of the Sundance Film Festival in 2003. Moss acted as producer, director and cinematographer.
Although the film is in the same "then vs. now" genre as The Big Chill and The Return of the Secaucus Seven, Moss tries mightily to make the "now" part far more interesting than just a bunch of "talking heads" wistfully remembering their past.
Shot over a four-year period, Moss narrowed his focus to follow the lives of just five of the former "River Rats" because
The river becomes yet another character in the film too, symbolizing the every-flowing passage of time with its swift currents and quiet pools.
Contemplating his life, one of the five says at the end of the film:
The nudity is filmed in a positive manner, without the hint of sexual innuendo, but just as good playful fun without the hint of self-consciousness. One of the women profiled says while watching herself in the older footage,
The Same River Twice represents a thoughtful and personal impression of a segment of American baby-boomers not often seen in film: those who held to their youthful ideals and put them to work in their local communities. I hope the message gets distributed widely.
Note: The DVD version contains commentary by Director Robb Moss, a theatrical trailer, and a Q&A session with the director about the film at Harvard University. Sadly there are no subtitles available for the hearing impaired.
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Review by Gary Mussell, SCNA Film Critic
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