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==Reception and legacy== In 1973, Chuck Kraemer predicted that ''David Holzman's Diary'' would be remembered as "the underground autobiographical cinema verité film of the sixties," and that "scholars of the nineties will revere it."<ref>{{cite news |last1=Kraemer |first1=Chuck |title=David Holzman's Diary |agency=The Real Paper |date=14 March 1973}}</ref> Since then, the film has remained obscure to the general public while developing and maintaining a strong critical reputation, such that its ratings on [[Rotten Tomatoes]] are 91% approval among critics and 76% approval among audiences.<ref>{{cite web |title=David Holzman's Diary |url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/david_holzmans_diary/ |website=Rotten Tomatoes |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> Likewise, the ''[[TV Guide]]'' website says that "this provocative, endlessly self-conscious film today stands as one of the best independent films of the 1960s."<ref>{{cite magazine |title=David Holzman's Diary |url=http://www.tvguide.com/movies/david-holzmans-diary/tv-listings/112266/ |magazine=TV Guide |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> After its initial years on the festival circuit, ''David Holzman's Diary'' gradually became "a classic, shown in university classes and film classes" for reasons including its engagement with film theory and practice.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Levy |first1=Emanuel |title=David Holzman's Diary (1968): Jim McBride's Impressive Directing Debut Starring Kit Carson |url=http://emanuellevy.com/review/david-holzmans-diary-1968/ |website=EmanuelLevy.com |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> In terms of film practice, it shows a young man using various newly available film technologies and innovative techniques, including "static long takes with monologues; extended passages of black screen; fish-eye distortions; [and] lateral travellings that offer [[Diane Arbus|Arbus]]-like views of everyday grotesquerie."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Martin |first1=Adrian |title=David Holzman's Diary by Jim McBride |journal=Desistfilm |date=May 2003 |url=http://desistfilm.com/david-holzmans-diary-by-jim-mcbride/ |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> It shows David using these techniques in making a diary film, a format that is technically simple and affordable—a natural option for young creative filmmakers with limited resources. One such young filmmaker at the time was [[Brian De Palma]], who said that: <blockquote>When I first got my 8mm sound camera, I'd carry it around like David Holzman and try to film everything I did and look at it. My friends and I had cameras all the time and we were all film directors. I filmed a whole section of my life—people I was going out with, my friends. I just shot everything. I directed the scenes, too. And it all came from ''David Holzman's Diary''.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=De Palma |first1=Brian |title=Guilty Pleasures: Brian De Palma |journal=Film Comment |date=May–June 1987 |url=https://www.filmcomment.com/article/guilty-pleasures-brian-de-palma/ |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref></blockquote> ''David Holzman's Diary'' has been referenced directly or indirectly in subsequent films including the 1969 drama ''[[Coming Apart (film)|Coming Apart]]'', the 1974 comedy feature ''[[Yackety Yack]]'', the 2001 comedy-drama ''[[CQ (film)|CQ]]'', and the 2002 comedy short ''Camera Noise''. In 2011, Kevin B. Lee made a two-part online documentary about the film titled ''Diary of David Holzman''.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Lee |first1=Kevin B. |title=Diary on David Holzman, Part 1: The Sons and Daughters of David |date=13 June 2011 |url=https://vimeo.com/25038941 |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Lee |first1=Kevin B. |title=Diary on David Holzman, Part 2: Getting to the "Real" Stuff |date=13 June 2011 |url=https://vimeo.com/25046897 |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> Film critics, scholars, and fans also have written a lot about various aspects of the film, mostly its complicated relations between fact and fiction; between art and life; and between the public and private spheres. === Relations Between Fact and Fiction === This film's engagement with fact vs. fiction elicited some of its earliest and strongest critical reactions, namely from audience members who felt duped; angry that they were led to believe that David Holzman was an actual person and the film was a documentary. Viewers at the Flaherty Seminar screening were reportedly "outraged" at the film,<ref>{{cite book |editor-last1=Jacobs |editor-first1=Lewis |title=The Documentary Tradition |date=1968 |publisher=W.W. Norton & Co. |location=New York |page=483}}</ref> which also was "booed at the 1968 San Francisco Film Festival when the end credits revealed it to be fiction."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wolf |first1=Jaime |title=David Holzman's Diary |journal=The Criterion Collection |date=26 October 1994 |url=https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/878-david-holzman-s-diary |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> A college newspaper review noted a sense of "great shock" at having "thought we'd found a truth about life from a film of lived life; instead, we got that meaning from a piece of imaginative art."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kaplan |first1=Martin H. |title=The Dull and the Zippy David Holzman's Diary at Lowell Dining Hall, 8 p.m. Saturday and Dunster Dining Hall, 8 p.m. Sunday |journal=The Harvard Crimson |date=19 February 1971 |url=https://www.thecrimson.com/article/1971/2/19/the-dull-and-the-zippy-david/ |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> L. M. Kit Carson said that, given such reactions, when MoMA was to screen the film in 1968, the museum billed the film as a comedy rather than a documentary.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Carson |first1=L.M. Kit |title=A Voice-Over |journal=Film Library Quarterly |date=1969 |volume=2 |issue=3 |page=20}}</ref> All this shock and anger may seem to be overreacting, but the film touched a nerve by being so convincing and waiting until the latest possible moment to reveal that it was all staged. The film was so convincing due to many techniques, including its consistent use of mobile camera and sound equipment, location filming, minimal editing, unknown actors, improvised dialogue, and highly personal subject matter, with the David character talking extensively about himself. Louise Spence and Vinicius Navarro identify some additional techniques: "the direct address to the camera, the wandering narrative, the visual and aural disorder (muddy sound and blurred focus), and the compulsive use of dates to describe the day's filming."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Spence |first1=Louise |last2=Navarro |first2=Vinicius |title=Crafting Truth: Documentary Form and Meaning |date=2011 |publisher=Rutgers University Press |page=31}}</ref> Altogether, they write, this carefully crafted film violated "the contract that binds documentary filmmakers to their audiences;" it did a lot of work to "upset our faith in documentary representation and presumptions that are often associated with non-fiction cinema."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Spence |first1=Louise |last2=Navarro |first2=Vinicius |title=Crafting Truth: Documentary Form and Meaning |date=2011 |publisher=Rutgers University Press |page=31}}</ref> Further blurring lines between fiction and fact, this film explores how, even in actual documentaries, truth can be manipulated—consciously or unconsciously—before, during, and after filming. Vincent Canby wrote that the film "highlights questions we all have about the quality of truth that can be captured by the cinema verité camera," and about the "awful possibilities for distortion" via the editing process.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Canby |first1=Vincent |title=Your Life Might Make a Good—or Bad—Movie |agency=The New York Times |date=9 December 1973}}</ref> In his critical monologue within the film, Pepe speaks to how the act of filming can change what's being filmed: <blockquote>As soon as you start filming something, whatever happens in front of the camera is not reality any more. It becomes a work of art ... And you stop living somehow. And you get very self-conscious about anything you do. 'Should I put my hand here?' ... 'Should I place myself on this side of the frame?' And your decisions stop being moral decisions, and they become aesthetical decisions.</blockquote> Putting this differently, Jaime Wolf writes that ''David Holzman's Diary'' applies what film critic [[Andrew Sarris]] described as the [[Uncertainty principle|Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle]] of documentary filmmaking, namely "the inevitable effect of the presence of an observer on the behavior of the observed."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wolf |first1=Jaime |title=David Holzman's Diary |journal=The Criterion Collection |date=26 October 1994 |url=https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/878-david-holzman-s-diary |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> For better or worse, consciously or not, overtly or subtly, people often play to the camera, behaving differently than they otherwise would. Nowhere in this film is this more overt than in David's scene with the unnamed character dubbed by some as the "Thunderbird Lady." This extended scene of a woman—a self-proclaimed nude model—sitting in her car and talking boldly and crudely to the cameraman, mostly about sex—is just too extreme for an actual unmediated encounter, even on the streets of New York. Several critics noted her exaggerated performance for the camera, as well as the fact that she also altered what was going on behind the camera during this scene. L. M. Kit Carson reports that he "choked and dummied up"<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Carson |first1=L.M. Kit |title=A Voice-Over |journal=Film Library Quarterly |date=1969 |volume=2 |issue=3 |page=22}}</ref> and "became so unnerved"<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wolf |first1=Jaime |title=David Holzman's Diary |journal=The Criterion Collection |date=26 October 1994 |url=https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/878-david-holzman-s-diary |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> at this bizarre interview situation that Michael Wadleigh had to take over and complete the interview for him, something barely noticeable in the final film. David begins his diary by quoting Godard's famous statement that the medium of cinema is "truth twenty-four times a second." However, as Edward Copeland has observed, David does not mention that Godard's full quote ends with, "and every cut is a lie."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Copeland |first1=Edward |title=Mock 'n' Roll |journal=Edward Copeland's Tangents |date=29 July 2011 |url=https://eddieonfilm.blogspot.com/2010/07/mock-n-roll.html |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> Many writers have discussed the implications of ''David Holzman's Diary'' for truth beyond the area of documentary film—for cinema and photographic media more generally. Emanuel Levy writes that ''David Holzman's Diary'' is an example of "the impossibility of achieving complete objectivity on screen."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Levy |first1=Emanuel |title=David Holzman's Diary (1968): Jim McBride's Impressive Directing Debut Starring Kit Carson |date=12 May 2012 |url=http://emanuellevy.com/review/david-holzmans-diary-1968/ |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> ''TV Guide'' describes the film as, "One of cinema's most pointed statements about the impossibility of objectivity in film."<ref>{{cite web |title=David Holzman's Diary |url=https://www.tvguide.com/movies/david-holzmans-diary/review/112266/ |website=TV Guide |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> Similarly, Justin Stewart calls the film "a hoaxed blast of 'reality' whose main subject is the impossibility of objective documentation."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Stewart |first1=Justin |title=Interview: Jim McBride |journal=Film Comment |date=31 January 2013 |url=https://www.filmcomment.com/blog/interview-jim-mcbride/ |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> Many writers have described ''David Holzman's Diary'' as a satire of documentary films or filmmakers. For example, that the film "takes funny jabs" at the self-importance or seriousness of practitioners of the new "personal cinema."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Schwartz |first1=Dennis |title=Amusing cinéma vérité faux documentary |journal=Ozus' World Movie Reviews |date=5 July 2011 |url=http://homepages.sover.net/~ozus/davidholzmansdiary.htm |access-date=5 July 2018 |archive-date=29 August 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180829024731/http://homepages.sover.net/~ozus/davidholzmansdiary.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> These were filmmakers who "established a new relationship with their subjects: intimate, revelatory and personal, countering a documentary tradition in which human beings were primarily used to illustrate various social themes."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wolf |first1=Jaime |title=David Holzman's Diary |journal=The Criterion Collection |date=26 October 1994 |url=https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/878-david-holzman-s-diary |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> Filmmakers including Richard Leacock, D.A. Pennebaker, Andrew Noren, and the Maysles brothers. Regarding the extent to which his film mocks such filmmakers, McBride says he was not criticizing specific works or people; instead, he was jabbing at ideas—popular ideas about film and truth: <blockquote>There was this general feeling or idea that there was this kind of truth that could be revealed that had never been revealed before. This was very enticing to me, but at the same time it was also silly, the idea that there is some kind of objective truth that can be revealed. And so I got this idea to make a film about a guy who thought he could find out the truth about himself and about his life by filming it, and not succeed.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Stewart |first1=Justin |title=Interview: Jim McBride |journal=Film Comment |date=31 January 2013 |url=https://www.filmcomment.com/blog/interview-jim-mcbride/ |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref></blockquote> More recent writings on ''David Holzman's Diary'' sometimes group the film with subsequent fiction films that likewise posed as documentaries, including ''[[The Blair Witch Project]]'' and films by [[Christopher Guest]] such as ''[[This is Spinal Tap]]''. Dave Kehr describes ''David Holzman's Diary'' as, "much more convincing than [[Woody Allen]]'s ''[[Zelig]]''."<ref>{{cite news |last1=Kehr |first1=Dave |title=David Holzman's Diary |url=https://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/david-holzmans-diary/Film?oid=1061408 |newspaper=Chicago Reader |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> Jaime N. Christley groups it with ''[[Catfish (film)|Catfish]]'' and ''[[Exit Through the Gift Shop]]''.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Christley |first1=Jaime N. |title=David Holzman's Diary |journal=Slant |date=13 June 2011 |url=https://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/david-holzmans-diary |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> Other writings from recent years cite filmmaking techniques in ''David Holzman's Diary'' that were unusual at the time but have become more common, such as the direct address by characters to the camera, or the creative use of end credit sequences, usually in the form of entertaining behind-the-scenes outtakes captured while making fiction films. === Relations Between Art and Life === Many writers have noted ways that ''David Holzman's Diary'' depicts complicated relations between art and life; how David's life motivates and shapes his art, and vice versa. How his social life, his daily life at home, his background in film—all shape his artistic energy and choices, with various affects. And, vice versa, how David's art shapes his life, and the lives of others, unfortunately often negatively. Film critic Chuck Kraemer captures some of this complexity when he writes that David is, "every down-and-out filmmaker struggling for a vision, every sensitive New Yorker overwhelmed by the city's visual fecundity, every young man suffering lost love, every inchoate artist trying to sort out his life, to explain himself to himself, and to the world."<ref>{{cite news |last1=Kraemer |first1=Chuck |title=David Holzman's Diary |agency=The Real Paper |date=14 March 1973}}</ref> For David, art and life are fused in New York film culture. He is deeply immersed in films, constantly thinking about them, watching them, and quoting other people about them. Film is his obsession, but his daily life also includes radio and TV consumption. As Brody writes, David's city life depicts an "endless stream of Top Forty radio and a wondrous, hectic view of television."<ref>{{cite magazine |last1=Brody |first1=Richard |title=Movies: David Holzman's Diary |magazine=The New Yorker |date=26 August 2016 |url=https://www.newyorker.com/goings-on-about-town/movies/david-holzmans-diary |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> The Top Forty radio that David listens to includes news reports of war and social unrest along with popular music; and the "hectic view" refers to the sequence that David made by filming one frame from each shot from a whole evening's worth of network TV. Sitting all evening and clicking his camera once after every shot transition, David produced a two-and-a-half minute deluge of separate shots from a ''[[The Huntley–Brinkley Report|Huntley-Brinkley Report]]'' newscast; then from episodes of ''[[Batman (TV series)|Batman]]'', ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|Star Trek]]'', ''[[The Dean Martin Show]]'', and a talk show; and then a late-night airing of the [[Shirley Temple]] film ''[[Bright Eyes (1934 film)|Bright Eyes]]''. And, as David Blakeslee writes, a lot of commercials, "Still capable after all these years, and even in this incomprehensibly compressed format of delivering their powerfully efficient subliminal messages."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Blakeslee |first1=David |title=David Holzmans' Diary (1967) |journal=Criterion Reflections |date=28 September 2015 |url=https://criterionreflections.blogspot.com/2015/09/david-holzmans-diary-1967-ld.html}}</ref> This blast of television images speaks to aspects of David's life including the multitudes of images coming to him (and us) daily; and his rather boring life, insular and filled with TV and radio broadcasts along with film. It may also refer to Godard's "24 frames per second," how each individual frame conveys meaning in itself and in relation to other frames, in this case with a total of about 3,600 consecutive frames. David's life is shaped by images and popular culture, but he is not simply a passive consumer. He is an energetic and creative young filmmaker. Making films takes up a lot of his time, and affects his life, and those of other people, in various ways, not always with good results. While making his film, poking into peoples' lives, David alienates and even endangers women and gets himself punched by a cop. As Jaime N. Christley observes, "we meet David in personal and professional freefall. Bad choices, bad pathology, and just plain bad luck coalesce into a black cloud that eventually consumes his life, and before the spare title cards indicate the film's conclusion, our hero will have lost his girlfriend, his camera and sound kit, and revealed himself to be a minor sociopath with major control issues."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Christley |first1=Jaime N. |title=David Holzman's Diary |journal=Slant |date=13 June 2011 |url=https://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/david-holzmans-diary |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> ''TV Guide'' likewise lauds the film for being "unafraid to present and implicitly criticize the more unpleasant sides of its 'hero.'"<ref>{{cite web |title=David Holzman's Diary |url=https://www.tvguide.com/movies/david-holzmans-diary/review/112266/ |website=TV Guide |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> === Relations Between Public and Private === One key part of this film's engagement with art and life is its depiction of relations between public and private, relations that are gendered. As James Latham writes, David uses his film project partly to assert power over women; to spy on them, stalk them, and record them with or without permission, and thereby to potentially make those images public. Part of David's motivation for asserting this power, Latham writes, is that he is experiencing flipped gender roles, or "patriarchy in crisis."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Latham |first1=James |title='Your Life is Not a Very Good Script': David Holzman's Diary and Documentary Expression in Late-1960s America and Beyond |journal=Post Script |date=Summer 2007 |volume=26 |issue=3 |page=29}}</ref> In an era when women (as well as people of color and members of the LGBT community) are gradually gaining some power in public spaces, David "represents the growing realization that male power over women is waning."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Latham |first1=James |title='Your Life is Not a Very Good Script': David Holzman's Diary and Documentary Expression in Late-1960s America and Beyond |journal=Post Script |date=Summer 2007 |volume=26 |issue=3 |page=29}}</ref> Whereas Sandra, Penny, and the anonymous subway woman "are independent and associated with the outside man's world, David is comparatively needy, impotent, and isolated in his small inner world. [Only the "Thunderbird Lady"] is willing to indulge him, except she is too liberated and aggressive for David."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Latham |first1=James |title='Your Life is Not a Very Good Script': David Holzman's Diary and Documentary Expression in Late-1960s America and Beyond |journal=Post Script |date=Summer 2007 |volume=26 |issue=3 |page=29}}</ref> Many writers have noted the film's clear references to ''[[Rear Window]]'' (1954) and ''[[Peeping Tom (1960 film)|Peeping Tom]]'' (1960) and their related issues. Jonathan Rosenbaum writes, for example, that these films examine "notions of the camera as a probing instrument, especially in relation to voyeurism and other forms of aggressive sexual appropriation as well as self-scrutiny."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Rosenbaum |first1=Jonathan |title=David Holzman's Diary/My Girlfriend's Wedding: Historical Artifacts of the Past and Present |website=JonathanRosenbaum.net |date=14 October 2006 |url=https://www.jonathanrosenbaum.net}}</ref> Other critics note the public-private irony of fashion model Penny being unwilling to appear in David's film; or that David is "naked to everyone, but invisible to himself."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Christley |first1=Jaime N. |title=David Holzman's Diary |journal=Slant |date=13 June 2011 |url=https://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/david-holzmans-diary |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> More recent writings on ''David Holzman's Diary'' sometimes refer to how technology and culture have evolved since the 1960s, further blurring boundaries between private and public. For example, David Blakeslee writes that when he watched the film recently on the Vimeo website, he knew practically nothing about it, except that "it could be seen as a precursor of sorts to the 21st century phenomenon of YouTube vloggers who chronicle their lives to varying degrees of mundane detail, seeking to pull viewers into whatever fascinating experiences or excruciating dilemmas they think would hold their attention. Obviously, a lot has happened in the realm of personal public self-disclosure on film and video between 1967 and now."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Blakeslee |first1=David |title=David Holzmans' Diary (1967) |journal=Criterion Reflections |date=28 September 2015 |url=https://criterionreflections.blogspot.com/2015/09/david-holzmans-diary-1967-ld.html |access-date=5 July 2018}}</ref> ===Aftermath=== Typical for a small independent film, ''David Holzman's Diary'' was made by a small group of young and virtually unknown people who mostly continued to be unknown. This was the feature film debut for McBride and Carson; both of them continued to work over the years together or separately on some film and TV projects. Carson worked as a writer on the 1984 film ''[[Paris, Texas (film)|Paris, Texas]]'' and on McBride's 1983 [[Breathless (1983 film)|remake]] of Godard's ''[[Breathless (1960 film)|Breathless]]''. McBride directed the 1987 [[New Orleans]] [[neo-noir film]] ''[[The Big Easy (film)|The Big Easy]]'' and the 1989 [[Jerry Lee Lewis]] [[biopic]] ''[[Great Balls of Fire! (film)|Great Balls of Fire!]]'', as well as episodes of the television shows ''[[Six Feet Under (TV series)|Six Feet Under]]'' and ''[[The Wonder Years]]''. Michael Wadleigh directed and was a cinematographer and writer for the Oscar-winning 1970 concert documentary ''[[Woodstock (film)|Woodstock]]'', and directed, wrote, and acted in the 1981 horror thriller ''[[Wolfen (film)|Wolfen]]''.
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