Difference between revisions of "Dirty Hands"

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[[File:dirtyhands.jpeg|300px|right|thumb|Poster for "Dirty Hands"]]
 
[[File:dirtyhands.jpeg|300px|right|thumb|Poster for "Dirty Hands"]]
  
"Dirty Hands: The Art And Crimes of David Choe" is a documentary shot and direct by [[Harry Kim]] A.K.A. Guam Cruz. It debuted at the Los Angeles Film Festival in June 2008 and was released in theaters May 2010. It documents [[David Choe]]'s early career and apotheosis. It documents some diabolical shit. The film explores the David's insanity to stunning effect, and includes short cartoons and excerpts from his prison journals. It also documents his first art show at a local restaurant, and footage from his trips to Africa. It's one part uplifting and two parts vomit-inducing.
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"Dirty Hands: The Art And Crimes of David Choe" is a documentary shot and direct by [[Harry Kim]] A.K.A. Guam Cruz. It debuted at the Los Angeles Film Festival in June 2008 and was released in theaters May 2010. It documents [[David Choe]]'s early career and apotheosis. It explores some diabolical shit. The film explores the David's insanity to stunning effect, and includes short cartoons and excerpts from his prison journals. It also documents his first art show at a local restaurant, and footage from his trips to Africa. It's one part uplifting and two parts vomit-inducing. When David did his interview with Babwa Wawtahs the producers of the show cherry picked the most violent, "edgy", clips from the film.
  
 
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pjWvlupgl1Y "Dirty Hands: The Art And Crimes Of David Choe"]
 
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pjWvlupgl1Y "Dirty Hands: The Art And Crimes Of David Choe"]

Revision as of 18:58, 23 October 2014

Poster for "Dirty Hands"

"Dirty Hands: The Art And Crimes of David Choe" is a documentary shot and direct by Harry Kim A.K.A. Guam Cruz. It debuted at the Los Angeles Film Festival in June 2008 and was released in theaters May 2010. It documents David Choe's early career and apotheosis. It explores some diabolical shit. The film explores the David's insanity to stunning effect, and includes short cartoons and excerpts from his prison journals. It also documents his first art show at a local restaurant, and footage from his trips to Africa. It's one part uplifting and two parts vomit-inducing. When David did his interview with Babwa Wawtahs the producers of the show cherry picked the most violent, "edgy", clips from the film.

"Dirty Hands: The Art And Crimes Of David Choe"