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Interview with Nanette Burstein

Featuring kids in the media

Highlights:

AMERICAN TEEN intimately follows the lives of four teenagers in one small town in Indiana through their senior year of high school. Using cinema vérité footage, interviews, and animation, it presents a candid portrait of being 17 and all that goes with it. We see the insecurities, the cliques, the jealousies, the first loves and heartbreaks, the experimentation with sex and alcohol, the parental pressures, and the struggle to make profound decisions about the future.

In the film the stories coalesce into a narrative so engrossing that it resembles fiction more than documentary. The end result is a film that goes beyond the stereotypes of high school--the nerd and the jock, the homecoming queen and the arty misfit--to capture the complexity of young people trying to make their way into adulthood.

Transcript:

Director Nanette Burstein’s NYU thesis film turned into her first feature-length documentary, On the Ropes, which won a Special Jury Prize at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival, along with the DGA Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement and the International Documentary Association’s award for best documentary film; it was also nominated for an Academy Award. She coproduced and directed The Kid Stays in the Picture, which premiered at Sundance in 2002 and also screened at Cannes. Burstein’s other producing/directing credits include the five-part series Say it Loud: A Celebration of Black Music in America for VH1.

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