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Exit Through the Gift Shop review

Posted : 1 year, 3 months ago on 27 January 2023 11:14

I m not a documentary fan but There's sth special with this documentary . Even from the first scene u LL know that it's gonna be good . I didn t know that much about grafity and this film thought me many things about it in a simple funny moving realistic way . It's a really smart film that won t let u move ur eyes from screen .


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Exit Through the Gift Shop review

Posted : 10 years, 8 months ago on 27 August 2013 05:38

The first half is a excellent documentary about street art and the second half is a excellent documentary about pretentious hipsters and how easy it is to make money of nothing.


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An impressive movie

Posted : 12 years, 8 months ago on 4 September 2011 07:25

Since kept hearing some very good things about this flick, I was really curious about it and I was really eager to check it out. Wow... Eventually, I was rather blown away by the whole thing! First of all, there was a big discussion about the fact that it might actually be a fake but, personally, I didn't think it was a fake but I don't know for sure and, honestly, I really didn't care. Indeed, in my opinion, the whole thing really did happen and The allmighty Banksy actually got pissed off because Guetta got succesfull this way and decided to take revenge with this movie. But, of course, it is only a theory and we will never know for sure. On the other hand, it seemed that he still became mesmerized by this weird and egocentric French guy. Anyway, it was definitely a really intriguing study about Art and how you could define Art. It was also a fascinating jump into the graffiti world. I think the conclusion of the movie is that Art doesn't actually exist but it also can be found in everything. I know, this statement didn't seem to make much sense but it perfectly fit this movie. To conclude, it is a rather unique documentary and it is definitely worth a look.


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Enter Through the Absurdity

Posted : 13 years, 2 months ago on 27 February 2011 12:50

In 1999, Thierry Guetta was a mild-mannered clothing store owner who had developed quite an obsession with filming everything in sight. He liked to do this in order to essentially validate his own existence. Transforming his life into film made him feel as if he existed, something he felt left out of as a child when he was not made aware of his mothers deadly illness until it took her life. That year marked a change in Thierry's life though. His cousin, under the pseudonym Invader, made and planted several 8-bit inspired mosaics made out of discarded Rubic's Cubes around town. One day Guetta joined him, and he never stopped filming again. For the last ten years, Guetta built up reputation amongst the street artists of the world. He was allowed to film them all at work because he claimed to be making a documentary.

The truth, however, was completely different. Guetta had hundreds upon hundreds of tapes, all tucked neatly away in giant boxes inside his garage. He never intended to make a documentary. He just wanted to feel like he was alive. Hanging out with a group of individuals who the society had labeled criminals for vandalism, running across rooftops at night and putting up posters was the best way for him to feel alive. I don't believe he would've even needed the camera any more. Guetta still had one dream though. He wanted to film the elusive street artist named Banksy in action. The two met and befriended each other, and eventually Banksy left Thierry to edit the documentary he had been telling everyone would blow their minds.

Six months later he had finished the documentary. Thierry describes his film making method to be almost like a lottery. He randomly picked out tapes from the boxes without knowing what was on them, and edited them all into an insane avant-garde epileptic seizure named Life Remote Control: The Movie. After seeing it, Banksy asked Thierry if he could get the tapes for himself so he could edit something together. Thierry agreed, and almost as a sidenote Banksy suggested Guetta should make some art of his own. And boy, he did. He sold off everything he owned in order to employ a crack team of Photoshoppers who he commanded to throw random colors and ink blots on top of known photos and art. He built massive hype around his art show, made a million dollars with unique pieces that he made spray painting prints with no purpose or artistic intentions. Then Banksy made this film, depicting everything that had happened.


Can't blame him.

Much speculation has been presented over whether or not this movie is a "hoax." Is it fake or real? I argue it doesn't matter. Exit Through the Gift Shop is a satire, regardless of whether or not the events were set up. It defies the definitions of genre with it's very existence and I dare say we may never get another film that does it quite like this. This is why I described the basic events of the film to you. You can not point a finger at this film and call it a documentary to describe it. Labeling it as a single thing is counter-productive and false, as it is more than just one thing.

At the same time Exit Through the Gift Shop is a very light watch and an extremely deep one. You can watch it, enjoy it, laugh at Thierry's tragic mania, but at the same time you're forced to do more thinking than any film about post-modern art I've ever seen. As the film revolves around not only Thierry Guetta, but also street art, one might expect it to explain this style of art. It does not. By doing so you're simply shown images of these wonderful pieces people have plastered and painted on the walls of our cities for years, and left without a set base to think about these pieces on.

The film decisively intends not to explain a single thing about the art itself, which leaves you entirely on your own to think about what art is to you. It forces you to answer not just what you think art is, but it's meaning to you and especially whether or not you believe the relationship between the piece of art and it's maker has any stake in what you think of it. Even though simplistic, the art Guetta makes is viewed as fantastic by the people who visit his show, as they do not know he really doesn't know what he is doing, why he is doing it and how to do any of it. Should we condemn him for doing this, when really most of the other original and fantastic pieces of art seen previously in the film are nothing more than similar inside jokes of sort that only work in the way intended in the heads of their makers. Is Guetta's art somehow worse just because his methods of making it seem to almost acknowledge the ridicilousness of it all? There are even more questions the film raises, but these are all questions that each of us needs time to think about. The wonder of Exit Through the Gift Shop is that it is not just a hilarious character piece; it's also the most thought-provoking film I have seen all year and the wonder of it is that I don't believe there is a single grown-up out there who can't help but ask these questions when watching this movie. It forces you to ponder on your own relationship with art, and it does it in such a subtle and entertaining way that only afterwards you truly understand that you have indeed been duped into growing as a human being through these questions. What new film has come out in the recent years that have truly not only touched you but helped and almost forced you become more as a member of the human race? Exactly.


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O que é arte hoje?

Posted : 13 years, 3 months ago on 27 January 2011 11:01

Banksy é um artista conhecido ao redor do planeta por seus trabalhos urbanos, como o grafitti, de cunho social e político. Indo além dos muros, o artista dirigiu o documentário Exit Through the Gift Shop, que mostra e explica essa arte urbana, considerada por muitos um movimento, chamada de street art.

O filme pretende narrar a história de um videomaker francês, Thierry Guetta, que também pretende fazer vídeos sobre a arte de rua. Guetta, no entanto, não satisfeito em documentar, decide fazer arte. Assim, torna-se ele também um artista urbano, assumindo o nome de Mr. Brainwash.

A grande carta que Banksy tem em mãos é a discussão sobre o que é arte hoje, para que ela serve e qual a fronteira que separa o artista do baderneiro, o grafiteiro do pixador. Exit Through the Gift Shop não elucida com veemência essa questão, porém. Não há uma atenção cuidadosa com o posto de arte que o grafitti e todos esses meios de expressão urbanos estão tendo hoje. Não se dicute isso verbalmente.

Digo verbalmente porque, mesmo que o assunto não seja tratado com aprofundamento, esse assunto está ali, na tela. O que há de contra-balancear. O que antes estava nas ruas e produzido por pessoas marginalizadas, hoje vem ganhando status, preenchendo galerias no mundo todo e feito por, agora, artistas respeitados e cobiçados.

Agora respondendo por Mr. Brainwash, Thierry Guetta promove sua primeira exposição, em Los Angeles, EUA. Nesse caminho, o artista emergente decide começar do topo. Mas ao longo do filme, nota-se que ele não sabe muito bem o que faz. Por isso, contrata designers e outros conhecedores das técnicas para ajudá-lo a montar sua exposição.

Boatos contam que essa história seja mais uma brincadeira de Banksy, que tudo não passa de uma história inventada. É mais uma peça de arte do artista, que agora critica com bom humor as artes. Mas nem importa tanto. Exit Through the Gift Shop se mostra eficente a que veio. Expõe esse rico universo da arte urbana e abre mais um debate sobre o que é e qual a importância da arte na sociedade contemporânea.


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Exit Through the Gift Shop review

Posted : 13 years, 4 months ago on 4 January 2011 11:34

Amazingly great "Documentary" - a must see. You will not get what you expect. But most of you will enjoy it I guess :-)


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