Arts+CultureCult VaultCult Vault #37: Matt Porterfield on StreetwiseMatt Porterfield on why he chose Martin Bell's 1984 documentary looking at teens in SeattleShareLink copied ✔️May 17, 2013Arts+CultureCult VaultTextCarmen Gray Taken from the May 2013 issue of Dazed & Confused: Martin Bell’s gritty Tom Waits-soundtracked doc Streetwise (1984) grew out of a Life magazine photo assignment his wife Mary Ellen Mark worked on; it revealed a Seattle underbelly of hustlers, dumpster divers and teen prostitutes, showing that even in “America’s most liveable city” desperation was rampant. The film struck a lasting chord with US indie director Matt Porterfield, whose latest project, I Used to Be Darker, screened in Sundance and Berlin. “I found Streetwise in my local video store and fell in love with it. No movie exists with more humanity and pathos. The subjects – Tiny, Rat, Dewayne, Shadow, Chrissie, Munchkin, Baby Gramps – are iconic in that self-aware, grown-up-too-soon, nothing-to-lose way, and are funny and grave in equal measure. As a document, it’s the epitome of what theorist André Bazin calls cinema’s ability to ‘embalm time’: these beautiful lives, hard and presumably short, burn on but don’t wait.” Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREWhy did Satan start to possess girls on screen in the 70s?Learn the art of photo storytelling and zine making at Dazed+Labs8 essential skate videos from the 90s and beyond with Glue SkateboardsThe unashamedly queer, feminist, and intersectional play you need to seeParis artists are pissed off with this ‘gift’ from Jeff KoonsA Seat at the TableVinca Petersen: Future FantasySnarkitecture’s guide on how to collide art and architectureBanksy has unveiled a new anti-weapon artworkVincent Gallo: mad, bad, and dangerous to knowGet lost in these frank stories of love and lossPreview a new graphic novel about Frida Kahlo