![]() ![]() By the end of this movie, even Davis’ unkempt mustache and humble midwestern twang will seem like the sleight-of-hand of someone who doesn’t want you to know how dangerous he is. Of course, self-mythologizing narcissists like Davis have a natural tendency to reframe everything around them, and the constant noise created by such addictively operatic characters helps deflect from the damage they cause it’s hard to listen for anything else about someone who keeps shooting himself in the stomach, a fact that Davis mastered into a masochistic sales pitch. The result is a rich film that nevertheless calls regular attention to any of the even richer (if perhaps less entertaining) films it might have been, as the pinhole through which Bahrani looks at Davis’ legend can’t help but call attention to both of these men’s respective blind spots. “What makes a man risk his own life in order to save thousands of people, only to put hundreds of thousands of lives at risk?”Īnd yet, in stark contrast to something like Herzog’s “ Grizzly Man” - which used a similarly puckish approach to hone in on the tragedy of its subject - every chapter of Davis’ biography leaves behind a new layer of collateral damage that Bahrani’s laser-targeted thesis can’t afford to examine. To Bahrani, Davis is a caricature of the false altruism that dignifies the American experiment. The director’s always jaw-dropping but often unfocused “ 2nd Chance” is cinched together by his running commentary, which starts with a clear plan of attack - “What drew me to Richard were his contradictions” - and only goes quiet during a tragicomic final scene so damning that it doesn’t leave any room for interpretation. An acolyte of Werner Herzog and Errol Morris who’s leveraged the neorealism of his early films (“Chop Shop,” “Man Push Cart”) into a much broader series of portraits and parables about the evils of capitalism (“99 Homes,” “The White Tiger”), Bahrani isn’t shy about editorializing Davis’ story - the story of a man who made a fortune by endangering the very customers he claimed to keep safe. One imagines that’s almost certainly true, but Bahrani’s carnival barker approach to non-fiction cinema suggests that fact-checking wasn’t a top priority here. ![]() “In 500 million years,” director Ramin Bahrani interjects in the affectless tone that will come to define his first documentary, “Richard Davis is the only man to shoot himself 192 times.” We think we’re looking at the kind of eccentric that America’s individualistic ethos has allowed this country to mass produce for the last 250 years, but Davis prefers to think of himself as just another humble participant in the arms race that’s been unfolding on this planet for the last 500 million years. Where to Watch This Week’s New Movies, from ‘Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. “Easy as pie” he winces after the demonstration, a shuttlecock-sized welt forming above his belly button. Marine turned pizza restaurateur turned body armor salesman Richard Davis, the “one of those” he’s trying to advertise is a proprietary bulletproof vest much smaller and more wearable than what soldiers and policeman had worn until Davis started the company he called Second Chance in the late 1970s, and the bullet he fires into his gut represents but one of the 192 times that he’s performatively shot himself at point-blank range. ![]() Bleecker Street releases the film in select theaters on Friday, December 2.Ī middle-aged white man shaped like an empty shotgun shell stands on his lawn and speaks directly into a home video camera: “A lot of people think I’m kind of stupid for doing, but if there’s just one knucklehead out there who this will make a difference to - who sees this and says ‘maybe I will get one of those’ - then it’s worth it.” At which point he presses a pistol against his chest and shoots himself in the stomach. Editor’s note: This review was originally published at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival.
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