In a Dream (DVD)
DIRECTED BY - Jeremiah Zagar
IndiePix Price: $26.95
RUNTIME - 80 minutes
YEAR - 2008
FORMAT - DVD Region All
COUNTRY - United States
LANGUAGE - English
SPECIAL FEATURES -
"Paints on the Ceiling" Short Fiilm courtesy of Cinelan, "Coney Island 1945" Short Film, "Cutting Ice to Snow" Music Video by Efterklang, "Recommitment" Short Documentary, Theatrical Trailer, Delted Scenes, Alternate Ending
GENRES - documentary
Film Info
In the vibrant, bohemian neighborhood of South Philadelphia, 50,000-square feet of concrete are covered with tile and mirror mosaics that were created by renowned artist Isaiah Zagar.
The murals chronicle his love for his wife, Julia, and subtly hint at the darker corners of an extraordinary imagination. Where Isaiah is an obsessive and self-absorbed former Peace Corps volunteer who has become an icon in South Philly's art community, Julia is gracious and warm. For decades, their opposing natures complemented one another perfectly. But, in a moment of great stress, just before picking up their oldest son from a rehabilitation center, the family implodes. Isaiah confesses to an affair with his assistant, is kicked out of the house, and spirals into a debilitating nervous breakdown.
Related Links:
Official Website, Herzliya Films, In A Dream Blog
Press
Reviews
"Bursting with vivid home movies and loving appreciations of Isaiahs artwork frenzied drawings and monumental mosaics in tile and mirror, many of which now beautify his Philadelphia neighborhood In a Dream abounds in visual pleasure." -- The New York Times
"Where most documentarians would rest on the laurels of a great subject and riveting present-tense drama, director Jeremiah Zagar has observed too much of his fathers creative logic to cheat us with artless hagiography. In dreamily paced tracking shots, macro close-ups, time-lapse glimpses of Isaiahs processes, archival footage, and animation, In a Dream exhibits as much beauty and sensuality as Isaiahs work, while the unabashedly personal nature of the filmmaker-subject dynamic is as candid about familial madness as Tarnation, and captures more insight than those Friedmans did." - Aaron Hillis, The Village Voice

