Stevie

Documentaire
    Réalisé par Steve James • Écrit par Steve James
    États-Unis • 2002 • 140 minutes • Couleur
  • N° ISAN :
    non renseigné
Résumé

Alors qu'il était étudiant dans l'Illinois, Steve James s'est porté volontaire en tant qu’"Advocate Big Brother" auprès de Stevie Fielding, un adolescent turbulent. Bien qu'ils aient perdu le contact, Steve retourne voir son jeune ami dix ans plus tard et le retrouve à un carrefour de sa vie : Stevie est accusé d'avoir agressé sexuellement une jeune membre de sa famille, accusation qui amplifie la discorde déjà existante au sein de sa famille élargie. Réintégrant sa vie de cinéaste et d'ami, Steve tente d’être un soutien pour Stevie dans ces circonstances difficiles.

In his college days in the early 1980s, director Steve James was a Big Brother for Stevie Fielding, a traumatized, hyperactive kid from a dysfunctional family. In 1995, after the success of Hoop Dreams, James decides to return to Illinois and pay a visit to Stevie. He does so because he is still worried about the boy, but he is also entertaining the idea of making a film about Stevie's life - a fact that he admits quite frankly. Stevie turns out to be living in a trailer with his step-grandmother, a stone's throw away from his mother with whom he rarely speaks anymore. After a failed marriage, he now has a mentally disabled girlfriend and is almost permanently unemployed. Two years into filming, Stevie is charged with a horrifying crime whose legal outcome takes nearly three years to resolve. James's film is an attempt to understand Stevie and his complex past, a childhood fraught with violence and abuse. In the process, this same attempt puts the filmmaker face to face with his own actions. The result is a discerning, sometimes shocking and often touching portrait of the world of the American subclass derisively known as "white trailer trash" - including their humor, their resilience, and their unremitting aspiration to lead normal lives.

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