While not exactly Ken Burns territory, this expansive documentary on the multi-tiered
life of Russian émigré-cum-novelist-cum-philosopher Rand is nothing if
not ambitious. At 147minutes, it may in fact be too ambitious for its own good, slavishly
marking everything about Rand from her humble origins in St. Petersburg to her waning
years post-Atlas Shrugged when she was making the rounds of such television interview
programs as Donahue. Frankly, I haven't seen anything more bizarre in years than
the sight of the pudgy-cheeked Rand giving Phil Donohue's silver mane a good what-for
-- the pairing of these two (in 1980) was, and remains, one of the oddest philosophical
sparring matches in known history. That aside, Paxton has recruited Rand scholars
from all over to echo her always controversial opinions and add insight where possible.
Colleagues Dr. Harry Binswanger and Dr. Leonard Peikoff recount Rand's transition
from a bright if introspective Russian child who, after suffering through the October
Revolution, enrolled herself in film school (while still in the Soviet Union) and
then managed against all odds to secure a passport to visit relatives in Chicago.
Rand never returned to her homeland, nor, it is assumed, did she plan to. Once in
the U.S., she hurriedly set about learning her adopted language so that she could
pursue her real goal, that of becoming a screenwriter in Hollywood. Although she
was originally taken under the wing of Cecil B. DeMille while the director was in
the course of shooting King of Kings, Rand kept busy during the Depression honing
her fledgling skills writing plays and preparing to begin work on her first great
novel, We the Living. Always an outspoken critic of the Soviet system (and fascism
and collectivism in general), Rand at first found it difficult to have her anti-Soviet
work published in the Bolshevik-happy heyday of 1930s Hollywood. As Stalin's oppressive
regime was eventually dragged into the light, Rand found more acceptance, but like
modern Rand progeny such as Camille Paglia, acceptance was hard-won. Paxton is thorough
to the point of punctiliousness -- there's not an event that remains unrecounted
here, and no aspect of Rand's philosophy goes unexamined. Her deep hatred of altruism
("I regard that as evil," she remarks. "It means placing the interests
of others above your own.") and the antipathy that engendered makes for some
dishy, objectivist commentary, but most of all Paxton reveals a woman before her
time, neither feminist nor shrinking violet, and above all stridently passionate.
The same applies to Paxton's film; by the end of its 147 minutes, you'll only have
to read the books and plays to seemingly know all there is to know about Unpronounceable Rand.
--Marc Savlov
Full Length Reviews
Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life 
Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life 
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