Neverland: The Rise and Fall of the Symbionese Liberation Army

Rank

Middle 40-60% of all time (see others with this rank)

Festival Year

2004 (click here to see all competition films from this year)

Category

Documentary Competition

Non-Cast Credits

Robert Stone, Nick Fraser, Mark Samels, Howard Shack, Richard Neill, Don Kleszy, Gary Lionelli, Coll Anderson

Description

"Death to the fascist insect that prays upon the life of the people!"

In 1974, a teenage newspaper heiress and Berkeley undergrad was kidnapped at gunpoint from her apartment, setting off one of the most bizarre episodes in recent history. The kidnappers, completely off the map before Patty Hearst disappeared into the San Francisco night, were a small band of young, ferociously militant political radicals, dedicated to the rights of prisoners and the working class, They called themselves the Symbionese Liberation Army. Over the course of about three years they robbed banks, senselessly killed two innocent people, instigated a firefight after attempting to shoplift a pair of socks, and, most famously, converted their hostage and victim. They also achieved an undeniably visionary manipulation of the media, inciting perhaps the first modern media frenzy.

Presenting resonating questions about the role of the media in America -- mouthpiece? messenger? truth seeker? -- the ethical dilemmas posed by new technologies, and the proximity of madness to political extremism, Robert Stone's Neverland is an unprecedented, elegant, and thoroughly fascinating account of the spiraling, disastrous descent of the most notorious domestic terrorists in American history.

Reviewer

Elizabeth Richardson (see other films reviewed by the same reviewer)

Film Takes Pace.