Sarah Kelly's absorbing documentary on the making of Robert Rodriguez's From Dusk
Till Dawn breaks down the fourth wall between audience and performers and then proceeds
to devour it whole with infectious glee and sublime panache. Chronicling the production
of Rodriguez's drive-in vampire/gangster epic from conception to martini shot, Full
Tilt Boogie is as much a sociology lesson on the politics of a major film shoot as
it is a dry, sardonic comedy of errors and frayed nerves. Above all, though, it's
manna from film geek heaven as a roster of semi-indie luminaries (in spirit if not
in budget) such as Tarantino, Keitel, and the great Michael Parks (remember Then
Came Bronson?) parade before Kelly's camera and offer their insights on the filmmaking
process. Beginning with an outrightly hilarious bit of staged comedy from Dusk stars
Tarantino and then-ER heartthrob Clooney as they wend their way through the backstage
corridors on their way to the set, Full Tilt Boogie cuts from conversations with
Rodriguez to Clooney's barrage of wisecracks and practical jokes, and from on-set
crew interviews to the mounting threat of a I.A.T.S.E. strike against the film's
non-union status. Politics threaten to bring a halt to the production: One memorable
(if overly long) sequence has director Kelly and producer Rana Joy Glickman flying
off to Miami to seek out their union nemesis in a scene reminiscent of Michael Moore's
Roger & Me hijinks. Meanwhile, back at the Barstow, California shoot, the infamous
Titty Twister biker bar catches fire in the wake of a particularly fiery pyrotechnic
shot and nearly burns to the ground. And, of course, what would a desert shoot be
without a dust storm? The travails of the filmmaking process -- both ordinary and
extraordinary -- are captured by Kelly with witty aplomb. Where else could you see
Tarantino point out that he "could sleep with any woman on this set" and
get away with it? Well, okay, probably on any QT set, but you know what I mean. It's
cinema vérité in the midst of one of the most chaotic shoots imaginable;
the looks of relief on the faces of both cast and crew are palpable at film's end.
Not that it's all work, mind you. Much of Full Tilt Boogie is given over to the more
mundane aspects of filmmaking, such as on-set romances, the inner-workings of craft
services, and the Great Grip Debate: drunken slobs or hardworking, indispensable
technicians? Like Rodriguez's finished film, Full Tilt Boogie is a wild ride, full
of the requisite peaks and valleys and precious few plateaus. And beer. Lots of beer.
--Marc Savlov
Full Length Reviews
Full Tilt Boogie 
Film Vault Suggested Links
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Now and Then: From Frosh to Seniors 
Once Removed 
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