The Same River Twice

Robb Moss. | 78 minutes. Next Life Films.

No Comments | Post Comment

A real-life Big Chill, this rich documentary juxtaposes two sets of footage that director Robb Moss shot of his five closest friends. The film begins with grainy 1970s images of the hippie pals enjoying a monthlong rafting trip down the Colorado -- all in their birthday suits. It then skips ahead a quarter of a century, as Moss' camera finds the former free spirits on the same river -- now fully clothed -- dealing ambivalently with kids, careers, and mortgages.

Continues Below

Continued From Above

Though the film captures the clash between conviction and convenience, Moss' friends are hardly the Motown-fetishizing sellouts of The Big Chill. Two have been mayors, one is a talk-show host, another an aerobics instructor, and one, the hippie holdout, has remained a river guide all these years. As for Moss, when he's not exploring what has survived of the counterculture, he teaches filmmaking at Harvard.

Get Mother Jones by Email - Free. Like what you're reading? Get the best of MoJo three times a week.

Comments

Post new comment

Alternately, you may login to or register an account
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <ul> <ol> <li> <blockquote> <img>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

Photo Essays

When you dial a 1-900 number, who picks up the phone?
Meet the KKK's seamstress of hate couture.
The other side of Gitmo.
A photographer’s year at Angola Prison.