I have an odd take on this movie as someone who was at the 1996 NPS, and is in the movie for about 6 seconds.On one hand it is an awesome way to get people to see what we do and why we do slam. On the other hand it has perverted the slam, because people are using it a vehicle for there 15 minuets of fame. The irony is this is "slams" (as a whole) 15 minuets, not the poets who are in it.As far as a production itself, it is very well done, but the plot of the move is just way off. I still have a hard time trying to get behind a team from New York. It's New York! You can't route for New York. They should have followed the Austin team from the same year. That would have been a movie.I gave it a 5 based on the proliferation of "Sha clack clack!" in slam.
... View MoreThis movie is one of the most amazing documentries I have ever seen. It has high energy and unique talent ranging from all over the united states. With the competition and energy of a prime time football game, SlamNation combines raw talent, with comic relief, fierce competition, and an insight into a secluded world of poetry and coffee shops!
... View MoreA Poetry Slam is the literary equivalent of the Olympic diving competition - a poet reads a poem, three minutes or less, and a team of judges then awards that poet a score from zero to 10. People actually take this farcical sport rather seriously, sending teams of four poets from cities around the world to an annual National Poetry Slam held in a different Major League city each year.SlamNation looks at the 1996 National Poetry Slam held in Portland, Oregon. The film is both a good introduction to the weird world of slam poetry and a hip look at who's who for performance poetry insiders.The film crew follows several teams through a week of competition, focusing on the contention for the national title among poets from New York, Providence, and Berwyn (a Chicago, IL suburb). You'll see some good poetry, some excellent performances, and lots of inside jokes. The documentary covers both the performances and the gossip, making the tone of the film fall somewhere between "Roger and Me" and "So I Married an Axe Murderer."Saul Williams, star and co-writer of Slam!, the poetry-in-prisons favorite of Sundance 1998, makes several appearances as a member of the 1996 Nuyorican (New York) team. Poetry hero Beau Sia, also of New York, is fun to watch, and the group poems performed by the Austin Slam Team are amazing pieces of pure verbal theatre.
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