Medium Cool
With Robert Forster, Verna Bloom, Peter Boyle.
US, 1969, 35mm, color, 111 min.
The directorial debut of veteran cinematographer Haskell Wexler, Medium Cool is a landmark independent production that makes canny use of documentary techniques in constructing a fiction feature. Set in Chicago during the 1968 Democratic National Convention, the narrative focuses on a television cameraman (Forster) who becomes personally involved with the people and stories he covers, including a black cabbie, a single mother from Appalachia (Bloom), and a group of protesters who clash with the police outside the convention hall. Designed as a “wedding between features and cinéma vérité,” Wexler’s attempt to smuggle political reality into a theatrical tale faced significant challenges from distributors, critics, and censors but has survived as an important witness to its times.