BOOKWARS ("Terrific" - LA Times) (2000)

Documentary (0:01:19) United StatesUnratedDocumentary, Urban

The gritty world of New York City street booksellers told in a remarkable story that chronicles their lives and loves and their unique perspectives on life...see the Mayor and the NYPD try to shut them down!

The New Yorker

source: http://www.newyorker.com/arts/reviews/film/bookwars_rosette

""...bookselling is the kissing cousin of another urban art form: drug dealing""

by Michael Agger

BOOKWARS

A gritty, low-fi documentary about Manhattan's street booksellers which abounds in fascinating detail. The director and narrator, Jason Rosette, shows how bookselling is the kissing cousin of another urban art form: drug dealing. Both require a knowledge of profitable corner locations, an experienced eye for for potential addicts, and a steady supply of mood-altering substances. In the case of books, you want to be holding works by Carlos Casteneda and Kurt Vonnegut, perennial best sellers on the street. It's a hardscrabble existence: most street booksellers do not vend stolen books; they rely on church fairs, garbage-picking, and the state of New Jersey-"land of the two dollar book."

Unlike most war pics, the underdogs don't win in the end: Mayor Giuliani's quality-of-life campaign dispersend much of the community captured here.



Other Press Reviews
  • New York Film Critics Circle (on 03/14/00)
    "In BookWars, a superb nonfiction film by first-time feature director Jason Rosette, books are more than sources of knowledge. "
    by Matt Zoller Seitz
  • TV Guide Online (on 00/00/00)
    ""Who could help but root for the feisty bookies in the us-against-them conflict?""
    by Stephen Miller
  • Baseline (on 00/00/00)
    ""reminiscent of the Beat poets as Rosette details the grind of making a living from street sales -- from exposure to the elements to obtaining the merchandise.""
    by Dollie Banner
  • Time Out New York (on 00/00/00)
    "" a fascinating, often hilarious portrait of their stubbornly independent lifestyle, as well as their struggle to remain in business in the face of Mayor Giuliani's quality-of-living crackdown""
    by Mike D'Angelo