Personal Problems

Personal Problems is a 1980 film described as a "meta soap opera" directed by Bill Gunn and written by Ishmael Reed that depicts the life and personal relationships of an African American nurse (played by Vertamae Smart-Grosvenor) living in Harlem. The film was originally intended to be broadcast on television, but the public television network PBS and others did not pick up the soap opera.[1] It was shown across the United States at smaller screenings throughout the 1980s until it found renewed popularity after a screening in the late 2000s at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.[1] The film was restored in 2018 by Kino Lorber and re-released at the Metrograph theater in New York City.

Personal Problems
2018 re-release poster
Directed byBill Gunn
Written byIshmael Reed
Starring
Music byCarman Moore
CinematographyRobert Polidori
Release date
  • 1980 (1980)
Running time
165 minutes
Country
  • United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$40,000[1]

Cast

Production

Some of the characters in Personal Problems were initially developed to be featured in a radio soap opera, but this later evolved into a 30 minute video soap opera directed by Gunn and written by Ishmael.[1] The only scene from this original 30 minute version to appear in the 1980 version was a monologue by the character played by Sam Waymon.[1]

The scenes in Personal Problems were shot using a videocassette recorder which was a new technology at the time (previously most films were shot using film stock).[2]

Gunn was known for his improvisational style of directing and was known to let actors improvise during filming, with director of photography and cameraman Robert Polidori stating: "Bill was interested in improvisation, which made it a little harder to shoot" and "Bill would set up scenes as an experiment. He'd set up tensions and see how the tensions turned out".[1]

Reception

Glenn Kenny of the New York Times said of the film: "For all its rough edges, Personal Problems retains a vitality and an integrity that practically bounds off the screen." He also praised the film for its intimate depiction of African American life in New York, stating, "it's intimate to the point of awkwardness."[3] K. Austin Collins, writing for Vanity Fair, praised the movie as a "textually incomplete but spiritually overflowing accomplishment" and described it as "more than a clean narrative" which provided windows into a woman's life; "windows broad and intelligent enough to encompass a wide swathe of Black life generally, but free of neat narrative conclusions."[4] Chuck Bowen of Slant Magazine gave the film four stars and applauded Gunn and Reed's intimate portrayal of the characters, stating: "Gunn and Reed collapse conventional notions of reality, providing simultaneous glimpses into the minds of dozens of characters, lingering on scenes and informing them with confessional intensity."[5]

References

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