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Program Guide - True Lives
The Sweetest Sound
About the Filmmakers:

Alan BerlinerAlan Berliner's uncanny ability to combine experimental cinema, artistic purpose, and popular appeal in compelling film essays has made him one of America's most acclaimed independent filmmakers. His award-winning documentary films, Nobody's Business, Intimate Stranger, and The Family Album (all featured on POV) have been broadcast all over the world and have been honored at top international film festivals. He has won three Emmy Awards, and has had retrospectives of his films staged at both the Museum of Modern Art and the International Center of Photography in New York. A native New Yorker, Berliner is currently a faculty member at the New School for Social Research, where he teaches a course entitled “Experiments in Time, Light and Motion.” Berliner received a Distinguished Achievement Award from the International Documentary Association in 1993, and was a recipient of the Storyteller Award from the 2001 Taos Talking Picture Film Festival this past April. In addition to his work in film, Berliner has also produced a large body of audio/video installation work. He will be an artist in residence at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis later this year, and has been commissioned to create a large-scale interactive sculpture titled “Gathering Stones” for Holocaust Museum Houston which will open in March 2002.

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The Sweetest Sound by Alan Berliner

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PHOTOS

Acclaimed filmmaker Alan Berliner thinks a lot about names — how names are handed down through history, how they affect the way we think about one another, and how they function in what he calls "the language of memory."

In such award-winning films as The Family Album, Intimate Stranger, and Nobody's Business (all of which have been broadcast on POV), Berliner has become known for his idiosyncratic forays into matters of human identity and personality — what binds us, what separates us, and what endures over time — often turning to his own family as a subject. In The Sweetest Sound, which premiered before enthusiastic audiences at the 2001 Berlin Film Festival, Berliner turns the camera on himself in order to explore the essence of what a name really means.

"How do you convey the power, magic and mystery of names?" asks Berliner. "The way they confer identity? How they function as compressed histories — a set of codes that tell us where we come from, who we are, who we were, or sometimes even who we might want to be? The only way I could figure out how to do it was to fully examine one name very closely. My own."

Along the way, The Sweetest Sound takes a look at the historical origin of names and their social roles, finds the filmmaker questioning his parents about why they chose the particular combination of syllables he inhabits, interviews people on the streets of New York City, and visits various name societies around the country — like the Jim Smith Society and the National Linda Convention — that seem to celebrate the anonymity of sharing a collective and common name.

His quest even takes him to Ellis Island, where, surprisingly, he learns that the widespread belief that immigrants' names were changed by lazy or devious inspectors is more myth than fact. According to Marian Smith, chief historian of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, and Barry Moreno, librarian of the Ellis Island Immigration Museum and Statue of Liberty National Monument, name changes were instead part of a broader social process, suggested to the immigrants by co-workers, teachers, priests, rabbis, friends and family members, or in some cases imposed upon them by landlords or employers.

But the main focus of Berliner's journey leads him to muse over his own yearning to be unique, and the very role of a name in influencing personality and a sense of individuality. And what really bothers him is being mistaken for someone else named Alan Berliner. Berliner calls it "the same-name syndrome" — a difficulty accepting that there are other people out there who also have "his" name. It seems he's always being mistaken for the Belgian filmmaker, Alain Berliner, and often congratulated for having made his film, Ma Vie en Rose, which won a Golden Globe Award in 1997. Or constantly receiving pay checks (the good part) and phone calls asking for shots of Elizabeth Taylor and Frank Sinatra (the bad part) intended for Alan Berliner, the celebrity photographer living in Los Angeles.

To confront, and perhaps to exorcise his demons, Berliner conducts an Internet search on his name (known as "ego-surfing"), supplemented by 800 hand-signed letters sent out to Berliner families around the world, in his zeal to locate everyone he can find named Alan Berliner and invite them to dinner at his New York City home.

When 12 other Alans accept, Berliner films the Alan Berliner dinner as he decides whether the 12 other Alan Berliners are his "name cousins" or actually "the competition." In the end, The Sweetest Sound becomes an absorbing personal essay in search of the primal connection between names and identity.

(1 hour)

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Note: Click on an image to open the full size version in a new window. Use File > Save As... to save the image to your hard drive. Photos are for press and private use only. All rights reserved. All uses of the photos must be credited as indicated below. For additional information on rights and clearance isssues, contact communications@pov.org.

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Caption:
The Alans pose.
Credit:
Alan Berliner

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Caption:
The Alans dine.
Credit:
Alan Berliner

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Caption:
17,000 plus Berliners.
Credit:
Alan Berliner

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True Lives is presented by American Documentary, Inc. and the National Education Telecommunications Assocation.

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