Filmworker


Filmworker is a 2017 American documentary film directed by Tony Zierra about Leon Vitali, a successful British actor who, after playing the role of Lord Bullingdon in the Stanley Kubrick-directed Barry Lyndon, gave up his acting career to work for decades as Kubrick’s assistant. Filmworker premiered at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival on May 19 and was nominated for the L'Œil d'or, le prix du documentaire – Cannes.

Synopsis

After his performance as "Lord Bullingdon" in Stanley Kubrick’s Barry Lyndon, actor Leon Vitali gave up his career to become Kubrick’s personal assistant. For more than two decades Vitali played a crucial role behind-the-scenes helping Kubrick make and maintain his body of work. In Filmworker, Vitali’s experiences with Kubrick are brought together with previously unseen photos, videos, letters, notebooks and memos from his private collection. Interviews with actors, family, crew members and key film industry professionals who worked with Kubrick and Vitali are also utilized throughout the film.

Production

Director Tony Zierra was working on another Kubrick related project when he met Leon Vitali. After extensively interviewing Vitali, Zierra and his producing partner, Elizabeth Yoffe, decided that his story should be told and began shooting what would become Filmworker. The film took three years to complete and was shot in California, New York, Kentucky, UK and Sweden.

Participants

Filmworker features interviews with actors and film industry professionals who worked with, or knew, Kubrick and/or Leon Vitali, as well as members of Vitali's family. Participants include actors Ryan O'Neal, Danny Lloyd, Matthew Modine, Lee Ermey, Marie Richardson, Stellan Skarsgård, Pernilla August, Brian Capron and Treva Etienne. Film industry professionals featured in Filmworker include former and current Warner Bros. executives Julian Senior, Brian Jamieson, Warren Lieberfarb, Steve Southgate and Ned Price.

Reception

Filmworker was given a long standing ovation after its premiere at Cannes. Following Cannes, the press and critical reviews were favorable. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 92%, based on 24 reviews, and an average rating of 7.7/10. On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 72 out of 100, based on 7 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Owen Glieberman in Variety gave Filmworker a positive review and wrote that it is the best of the Kubrick-themed documentaries. Gwilym Mumford wrote in The Guardian that Filmworker is "A revealing and stirring celebration of one of cinema’s unacknowledged heroes." Bilge Ebiri of Village Voice put Filmworker on his list of top 12 best movies at Cannes 2017. Ann Hornaday in The Washington Post called Filmworker "movie love at its purest" and said that "Vitali’s story marked an incursion of the real world into Cannes in the very best sense, as a celebration of its anonymous inhabitants’ role in bringing our collective dreams to life."