She was a serial killer that's why she was hiding her work....
@mordecaiesther35919 ай бұрын
❤❤❤ I WANT TO GO BACK … life was much better
@The1trueking196611 ай бұрын
Where's the rest of these films?
@davidmitchell6873 Жыл бұрын
I like how she focused on the woman wearing shorts and the funny hat. I imagine back then she was an outlier but today she would look perfectly normal.
@ifeanyiorji8455 Жыл бұрын
One thing I can only say about her work... Remarkable !!
@bokehintheussr5033 Жыл бұрын
I'm an introvert who has a tendency to feel a bit misunderstood, and I loved this documentary so much. It inspired me to take up street photography as a hobby and find a sympatico hero in Vivian Maier. I love some of the interviews with people who knew her, particularly the grown up children she cared for as a nanny. All of them seem to have been effected by her quite deeply, and many of them in ways they don't seem to fully understand. It's really cool. It shows how introverts really are, far from being the socially unskilled people we seem to be. The real Vivian Maier didn't get found out until after she died. But now we know about her depth, compassion and interest in people. RIP Vivian.
@jamesbyrne9312 Жыл бұрын
Travis bickle at 9.40
@annmoses654 Жыл бұрын
This is the downtown Chicago I remember from my childhood. I love how it starts with the train ride to get you there and you emerge onto the street to see women in their colorful dresses.
@toke7560 Жыл бұрын
What a shame the slimy lawyers and so called art experts stuck their unwanted noses into this amazing happening. For me, she was/is up there in the top 3 worlds best. All with no money or help or connections.
@lcdegagne2 жыл бұрын
le quotidien de l amérique
@expressotartaruga2 жыл бұрын
Maravilhoso
@damondrill24162 жыл бұрын
Edwin Starr's "War" was the #1 song that week, and the Cubs beat the Padres 8-4 that Friday.
@jude9992 жыл бұрын
Thank you for not interposing a soundtrack, it lets us view the footage on our own terms.
@utop.i.a.delica29163 жыл бұрын
💞
@Manu_____.3 жыл бұрын
It is impossible for me to see this film without wondering what happened to those people's lives.
Looks like she went out for the day, brought camera and film and just filmed, until she had used it all. What a way, to spend an exciting day. She looked to like filming reflections, in glass.
@darkcustomxxx72524 жыл бұрын
Wow. Love the way she includes bits of chronological detail so we can actually get an idea of the time she was filming. Would love to know if it was 8mm or Super 8. She liked to keep up with gear, so it may have been super 8.
@justincase22714 жыл бұрын
Scary fact: 99,8 % of the people in this movie are dead. Including the film maker.
@davidmitchell6873 Жыл бұрын
That seem a little high.
@jamesbyrne9312 Жыл бұрын
Yeah the kids would only be mid 50s now
@thatbaldnurse4 жыл бұрын
This is so cool to see, people actually dressed up when they were downtown. I was definitely born a little too late (mid-70s). I wonder what people will be saying about us when film/video/cell phone footage is uploaded on a video file sharing website in 50 years, if something like that will still exist?
@PBosco4 жыл бұрын
"Beyond the Valley of the Dolls", 1970. Written by Roger Ebert, who had become friends with Russ Meyer after writing favorable reviews of several of his films. Interesting.
@cellan674 жыл бұрын
Not many overweight people at that time! Look at the people in any american city now....
@lawriegraney99295 жыл бұрын
The people criticising Vivian Maier in this film don't seem that credible. Perhaps they were just boring, run-of-the-mill people. Or maybe this is all just contrived for the film and for a reward of a few bucks. The crazier the artist, the more valued the good work is.
@neychev5 жыл бұрын
But is there a proof that she really took all that pix? After all is no record of her studying photography and at the same time even her earliest pictures are of an experienced photographer.
@attdnsk10335 жыл бұрын
Ummm what is that at the start just asking
@sharonwhite48473 жыл бұрын
Red line and wording? I think it's the type of film she used, name. She s riding on a train filming the buildings.
@attdnsk10333 жыл бұрын
@@sharonwhite4847 oh ok
@totallyfrozen5 жыл бұрын
Wow! An actual printed newspaper! Remember those? A simpler time. Great video! Love it!
@pagethreemodel4 жыл бұрын
They still print newspapers today. Maybe stick to the 'wow no cellphone' comments because you're coming off a bit too contrived.
@pennykent56876 жыл бұрын
I wept when I saw this. The film exposed much of my own life. I, also was a 24/7 caregiver for years. What people must understand is... You give up much of your own life when you work like this. It's a very private, isolating, consuming, draining, joyful, heartbreaking, ....(etc.) -life (job). I, myself, I took care of seniors. I gave up years, years of my life doing it. Like Vivian, I'm a creative, and it's hard to be expected to be focused on others all the time when your passion begs at your heart. -Thus said, i have no regrets. I came to Love all those I cared for, but perhaps like Vivian, I also wondered if people really thought about what I was giving up.... to devote myself so much to them. Perhaps this is the reason I too, became a "collector." Living in other people's homes, if your lucky enough to have your own room (& bed, not a couch in the living room),... your privacy is VERY limited, time to yourself is very precious,.... Many people seem to be quite critical of Vivian, but I understand her. This lifestyle is not easy. I myself, Loved the people I cared for, but secretly sometimes craved the outside world, and to have a little piece of it myself. I may not be expressing my thoughts well enough, but I recognize Vivian was someone with a great deal of Love even if people saw her as odd. She deserved more respect, and shouldn't have died ALONE in the end. She lived her passion. She gave her life to people, and she worked on feeding her own soal. Thank You Vivian, you're beautiful to me.
@2yoyodog5 жыл бұрын
Saw the film today..March, 14 2019....Did she really love the children she cared for? According to some of the now adult people she "nannied" at times she was cruel and had a very dark side. Highly recomend the film
@paulmoss41996 жыл бұрын
I am just wondering if the couple at 6:26 were holding the newspaper up in front of their faces to prevent them from appearing on film?
@totallyfrozen5 жыл бұрын
Paul Moss All that historic video and that’s what you were wondering about? SMH
@paulmoss41995 жыл бұрын
@@totallyfrozen yeah, what of it?
@delilahrosesmith48716 жыл бұрын
You notice most of the women wore dresses..somthing you don't see very often
@totallyfrozen5 жыл бұрын
Delilah Rose Too bad. I really love the look of them. So feminine and pretty. My mother used to dress that way.
@sharonwhite48473 жыл бұрын
Dresses are finally back and I hope they are here to stay.
@redemptionfilms47506 жыл бұрын
What is that in the beginning ? Sorry but i was not born in that timeline.
@totallyfrozen5 жыл бұрын
Are you referring to the tape tales before the pictures appear?
@jeenkzk59196 жыл бұрын
8mm has such a beautiful color to it! Looks even better seeing it on an actual projector!
@MegaBaz122 жыл бұрын
I have the 8mm projector it is great like u say
@estebanos90356 жыл бұрын
Whats the name of the piano song at the end?????
@ClassicVideos80s6 жыл бұрын
I was going to say this looks about 1970 judging by the style. Then I checked out the movie " weekend with the babysitter" and it was from 1970.
@annmoses654 Жыл бұрын
Good call!
@mst3kpimp6 жыл бұрын
Watching this now courtesy of showtime free preview weekend. not usually a topic that interests me but these photos are undeniably great.
@lylecosmopolite6 жыл бұрын
The Chicago I discovered as a young man nearly 50 years ago.
@mrdre10197 жыл бұрын
feels like a stake out.... love it
@surfcollector7 жыл бұрын
Things you don't see anymore...people going to a porn movie in the middle of the day or people carrying hat boxes. Not too many fatties either.
@TheAverycross7 жыл бұрын
Beautiful and inspired footage...and quite a diary of a different Chicago and time.
@desertdispatch7 жыл бұрын
at 4:22 is that a guy? just askin
@desertdispatch7 жыл бұрын
watch closely...did not see one woman wearing pants or jeans
@silentbloodyslayer987 жыл бұрын
i wanna cry when i see all those people, makes me feel i wanna live those days
@Corruptness7 жыл бұрын
Lame af, her photography is great, but there's nothing great about this tourist looking shit!
@epocketlsaml7 жыл бұрын
Dude has just found a modern time van Gogh
@georgelatsos49547 жыл бұрын
Just admire! Say nothing
@jamesdaniel20057 жыл бұрын
I had to watch every last minute of this, it drew me in. Fascinating the way subjects were picked out and isolated. VM was a true movie philanthropist!
@UnDEADBishop1387 жыл бұрын
If you like her work there is another photographer from that era who was similar with the almost-too-close portraits of strangers, but with a marginalized person niche. The photographers name is Diane Arbus.
@adrianramos1795 жыл бұрын
UnDEADBishop138 one big difference between them is that most of Diane Arbus street photography people are posing,not so much with Vivian Maier
@antoniobertezzolo63078 жыл бұрын
wonderful colors, wonderful atmosphere! I wish Kodachrome still existed!
Пікірлер
She was a serial killer that's why she was hiding her work....
❤❤❤ I WANT TO GO BACK … life was much better
Where's the rest of these films?
I like how she focused on the woman wearing shorts and the funny hat. I imagine back then she was an outlier but today she would look perfectly normal.
One thing I can only say about her work... Remarkable !!
I'm an introvert who has a tendency to feel a bit misunderstood, and I loved this documentary so much. It inspired me to take up street photography as a hobby and find a sympatico hero in Vivian Maier. I love some of the interviews with people who knew her, particularly the grown up children she cared for as a nanny. All of them seem to have been effected by her quite deeply, and many of them in ways they don't seem to fully understand. It's really cool. It shows how introverts really are, far from being the socially unskilled people we seem to be. The real Vivian Maier didn't get found out until after she died. But now we know about her depth, compassion and interest in people. RIP Vivian.
Travis bickle at 9.40
This is the downtown Chicago I remember from my childhood. I love how it starts with the train ride to get you there and you emerge onto the street to see women in their colorful dresses.
What a shame the slimy lawyers and so called art experts stuck their unwanted noses into this amazing happening. For me, she was/is up there in the top 3 worlds best. All with no money or help or connections.
le quotidien de l amérique
Maravilhoso
Edwin Starr's "War" was the #1 song that week, and the Cubs beat the Padres 8-4 that Friday.
Thank you for not interposing a soundtrack, it lets us view the footage on our own terms.
💞
It is impossible for me to see this film without wondering what happened to those people's lives.
This needs to be on Netflix 😭
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Looks like she went out for the day, brought camera and film and just filmed, until she had used it all. What a way, to spend an exciting day. She looked to like filming reflections, in glass.
Wow. Love the way she includes bits of chronological detail so we can actually get an idea of the time she was filming. Would love to know if it was 8mm or Super 8. She liked to keep up with gear, so it may have been super 8.
Scary fact: 99,8 % of the people in this movie are dead. Including the film maker.
That seem a little high.
Yeah the kids would only be mid 50s now
This is so cool to see, people actually dressed up when they were downtown. I was definitely born a little too late (mid-70s). I wonder what people will be saying about us when film/video/cell phone footage is uploaded on a video file sharing website in 50 years, if something like that will still exist?
"Beyond the Valley of the Dolls", 1970. Written by Roger Ebert, who had become friends with Russ Meyer after writing favorable reviews of several of his films. Interesting.
Not many overweight people at that time! Look at the people in any american city now....
The people criticising Vivian Maier in this film don't seem that credible. Perhaps they were just boring, run-of-the-mill people. Or maybe this is all just contrived for the film and for a reward of a few bucks. The crazier the artist, the more valued the good work is.
But is there a proof that she really took all that pix? After all is no record of her studying photography and at the same time even her earliest pictures are of an experienced photographer.
Ummm what is that at the start just asking
Red line and wording? I think it's the type of film she used, name. She s riding on a train filming the buildings.
@@sharonwhite4847 oh ok
Wow! An actual printed newspaper! Remember those? A simpler time. Great video! Love it!
They still print newspapers today. Maybe stick to the 'wow no cellphone' comments because you're coming off a bit too contrived.
I wept when I saw this. The film exposed much of my own life. I, also was a 24/7 caregiver for years. What people must understand is... You give up much of your own life when you work like this. It's a very private, isolating, consuming, draining, joyful, heartbreaking, ....(etc.) -life (job). I, myself, I took care of seniors. I gave up years, years of my life doing it. Like Vivian, I'm a creative, and it's hard to be expected to be focused on others all the time when your passion begs at your heart. -Thus said, i have no regrets. I came to Love all those I cared for, but perhaps like Vivian, I also wondered if people really thought about what I was giving up.... to devote myself so much to them. Perhaps this is the reason I too, became a "collector." Living in other people's homes, if your lucky enough to have your own room (& bed, not a couch in the living room),... your privacy is VERY limited, time to yourself is very precious,.... Many people seem to be quite critical of Vivian, but I understand her. This lifestyle is not easy. I myself, Loved the people I cared for, but secretly sometimes craved the outside world, and to have a little piece of it myself. I may not be expressing my thoughts well enough, but I recognize Vivian was someone with a great deal of Love even if people saw her as odd. She deserved more respect, and shouldn't have died ALONE in the end. She lived her passion. She gave her life to people, and she worked on feeding her own soal. Thank You Vivian, you're beautiful to me.
Saw the film today..March, 14 2019....Did she really love the children she cared for? According to some of the now adult people she "nannied" at times she was cruel and had a very dark side. Highly recomend the film
I am just wondering if the couple at 6:26 were holding the newspaper up in front of their faces to prevent them from appearing on film?
Paul Moss All that historic video and that’s what you were wondering about? SMH
@@totallyfrozen yeah, what of it?
You notice most of the women wore dresses..somthing you don't see very often
Delilah Rose Too bad. I really love the look of them. So feminine and pretty. My mother used to dress that way.
Dresses are finally back and I hope they are here to stay.
What is that in the beginning ? Sorry but i was not born in that timeline.
Are you referring to the tape tales before the pictures appear?
8mm has such a beautiful color to it! Looks even better seeing it on an actual projector!
I have the 8mm projector it is great like u say
Whats the name of the piano song at the end?????
I was going to say this looks about 1970 judging by the style. Then I checked out the movie " weekend with the babysitter" and it was from 1970.
Good call!
Watching this now courtesy of showtime free preview weekend. not usually a topic that interests me but these photos are undeniably great.
The Chicago I discovered as a young man nearly 50 years ago.
feels like a stake out.... love it
Things you don't see anymore...people going to a porn movie in the middle of the day or people carrying hat boxes. Not too many fatties either.
Beautiful and inspired footage...and quite a diary of a different Chicago and time.
at 4:22 is that a guy? just askin
watch closely...did not see one woman wearing pants or jeans
i wanna cry when i see all those people, makes me feel i wanna live those days
Lame af, her photography is great, but there's nothing great about this tourist looking shit!
Dude has just found a modern time van Gogh
Just admire! Say nothing
I had to watch every last minute of this, it drew me in. Fascinating the way subjects were picked out and isolated. VM was a true movie philanthropist!
If you like her work there is another photographer from that era who was similar with the almost-too-close portraits of strangers, but with a marginalized person niche. The photographers name is Diane Arbus.
UnDEADBishop138 one big difference between them is that most of Diane Arbus street photography people are posing,not so much with Vivian Maier
wonderful colors, wonderful atmosphere! I wish Kodachrome still existed!
shared facebook.com/uhdworld.essecifilmpro/
1970 era
Foxpowers early seventies
1968