
EVERYBODY STREET, directed by Cheryl Dunn, illuminates the lives and work of New York's iconic street photographers - including Bruce Davidson, Mary Ellen Mark, Elliott Erwitt, Ricky Powell and Jamel Shabazz - and the incomparable city that has inspired them for decades. Shot by renowned photographer Cheryl Dunn on both black and white 16mm film and color HD, the documentary pays tribute to the spirit of street photography through a cinematic exploration of New York City, and... (Full plot summary below)
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EVERYBODY STREET, directed by Cheryl Dunn, illuminates the lives and work of New York's iconic street photographers - including Bruce Davidson, Mary Ellen Mark, Elliott Erwitt, Ricky Powell and Jamel Shabazz - and the incomparable city that has inspired them for decades. Shot by renowned photographer Cheryl Dunn on both black and white 16mm film and color HD, the documentary pays tribute to the spirit of street photography through a cinematic exploration of New York City, and captures the visceral rush, singular perseverance and at times immediate danger customary to these artists.
Leave your thoughts about Everybody Street.
| OregonianJamie S. Rich"Everybody Street" makes a strong case for the happenstance of old-school methods and the captured moment grabbed in a once-in-a-lifetime shot. |
| Playback:stlSarah BoslaughEverybody Street allows the photographers to speak for themselves, and they're quite eloquent in illuminating why (and sometimes how) they do what they do. |
| User ReviewJoel LI find that Everybody Street is an amazing film both stylistically and content wise. Its diversity of thought, amazing visuals, and insight make Everybody Street essential to contemplating and understanding the deeper implications of the dynamics between the crowd, the humanity found within it and the photographer that attempts to capture it all. |
| User ReviewJack BI may be no expert on the realm of photography but this film is a marvel and a hopeful avenue for many into an interest/career in the subject on show, as well as a remarkable document of the fullness of just one place over the course of (relatively recent) history. Photography alone cannot make a film but this is far more than a photo album on screen, it's an involving film experience. Capture it as soon as possible. |
| User ReviewErika MBeautiful documentary! An inspiring street photography manifesto. |
| User ReviewJames LI've always been fascinated by "bad" New York..the City that oozed personality by mixing the downtrodden with the rich and the hustler with the regular business owner. This profile of the most prolific photographers of New York during that period appeals to me in that regard..and it also reveals some fascinating personalities on the other side of the camera. |
| User ReviewJoshua FMakes me want to hit the streets and take some pictures! |