If You Like ‘Boyhood’ Watch ‘American Promise’

By  · Published on July 11th, 2014

PBS/POV

The raves are flying thick around Boyhood, the long-time-in-the-making new film from director Richard Linklater which finally opens in theaters this weekend. Linklater and his crew shot the movie over the course of 12 years, so that they could capture the main character age in real time, from a young boy to a high school graduate. I can vouch for pretty much every good thing you’ve heard about the movie. It’s a fantastically moving, incredibly true-to-life piece of work, and an impressive accomplishment. It is not, however, a unique accomplishment, no matter how many critics may think it is.

While the scope of Boyhood’s production period may rival any completed fiction film, there are numerous documentary projects of equal or greater scale. An easy example is the Paradise Lost trilogy, which revisited the same legal case over a 17-year period. An even easier example is the Up series, which has been revisiting the same set of subjects every seven years for the last half century. But this week’s Doc Option is a film whose structure hews remarkably close to that of Boyhood. In fact, these two movies were trying to do almost the same thing – and with a significant overlap in the time during which they shot – but on opposite sides of the fiction/nonfiction coin.

American Promise was shot over the course of 13 years instead of 12. It has two protagonists, not one (though with both movies, you can argue that the parents are just as important as the main characters are). And while Boyhood is concerned with a variety of subjects that have to do with growing up, this doc is centered around one specific topic: education. When their son Idris started kindergarten, directors Joe Brewster and Michèle Stephenson decided to follow him and his best friend, Seun Summers, for the entirety of the boys’ grade school years. Up until their high school graduation, they’d have cameras trained on them, documenting the ups and downs in their learning process.

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