Back Alley Rip-Off Outtakes
Film Identifier: F.2013-02-0062
Run Time
0h 16m 51s
0h 16m 51s
Format
16mm
16mm
Color
Color
Color
Sound
Mag Stripe
Mag Stripe
Date Produced
1970
1970
Abstract
Outtakes from Don Mcilvain's unfinished film Back Alley Rip-Off, which was shot in the North Lawndale neighborhood of Chicago with local actors. The film follows two men that win a sweepstakes lottery, and the people who want to take the winning ticket from them. Several of McIlvaine's murals can be seen in these outtakes, including Into the Mainstream (1969, at West 16th Street and South Lawndale Avenue), an untitled mural at 16th Street and Hamlin Avenue, and Black Man's Dilemma (1970, at 3742 West 16th Street).
Back Alley RIp-Off is discussed briefly in Rebecca Zorach's 2019 book Art for People's Sake: Artists and Community in Black Chicago, 1965-1975. Zorach describes that McIlvaine "wrote a treatment and portion of a script and shot sample scenes. In the treatment, three street people split a lottery ticket that turns out to be a winner, and have to find one another again to claim their prize. The portrait of life on the margins, loving but cynical, includes street hustlers, a lesbian voodoo practitioner named Miss Cupid, a 'Superfly dude with two white girls,' a 'Sissy walking down street (switching),' a marijuana-smoking storefront preacher (Rev. Herb) who delivers a monologue in the toilet about the temple of meditation he wants to build, and a group of militants trying to keep their revolution alive by acting like gangsters—intimidating store owners and moving in on the drug trade. A nightclub scene features a performance by the real-life singer, comedian, and transvestite performer Wilbur 'Hi-Fi' White, followed by his attempted seduction of a painter named Tommy Green. The characters in the sample reel McIlvaine shot and edited to send to Hollywood constantly blur the line between acting and not-acting—indeed the drunk characters seem actually to be drunk. In the portions for which film footage still exists, comic exaggeration sits side by side with extended, nonnarrative shots that provide a portrait of life on the West Side. A shot of the two militants strutting down 16th Street provides an opportunity to see both the façade of Art & Soul—with new, hip signage ('art & soul art gallery')—and Black Man's Dilemma, the mural by Don McIlvaine that replaced Sachio Yamashita's stripes on the side of the building.
Like [McIlvaine's other film Street Art in the Ghetto], [Back Alley Rip-Off] remained unfinished. The script is inspired both by local context and by the sense of possibility in Hollywood's newfound interest in Black subject matter that spawned the blaxploitation trend. The very character types suggest conflicting values: honest depiction, entertainment appeal, and the 'positive images' of the Black Arts Movement. Though the fiction film was obviously intended as a comedy, it also addressed the goal of portraying 'community activities' and 'behavioral patterns related to environmental surroundings'—thus channeling youth 'into constructive creative occupations.'" -– Zorach, pp. 277-278.
Note: while the film does have a magnetic soundtrack present, it does not contain any audio.
Outtakes from Don Mcilvain's unfinished film Back Alley Rip-Off, which was shot in the North Lawndale neighborhood of Chicago with local actors. The film follows two men that win a sweepstakes lottery, and the people who want to take the winning ticket from them. Several of McIlvaine's murals can be seen in these outtakes, including Into the Mainstream (1969, at West 16th Street and South Lawndale Avenue), an untitled mural at 16th Street and Hamlin Avenue, and Black Man's Dilemma (1970, at 3742 West 16th Street).
Back Alley RIp-Off is discussed briefly in Rebecca Zorach's 2019 book Art for People's Sake: Artists and Community in Black Chicago, 1965-1975. Zorach describes that McIlvaine "wrote a treatment and portion of a script and shot sample scenes. In the treatment, three street people split a lottery ticket that turns out to be a winner, and have to find one another again to claim their prize. The portrait of life on the margins, loving but cynical, includes street hustlers, a lesbian voodoo practitioner named Miss Cupid, a 'Superfly dude with two white girls,' a 'Sissy walking down street (switching),' a marijuana-smoking storefront preacher (Rev. Herb) who delivers a monologue in the toilet about the temple of meditation he wants to build, and a group of militants trying to keep their revolution alive by acting like gangsters—intimidating store owners and moving in on the drug trade. A nightclub scene features a performance by the real-life singer, comedian, and transvestite performer Wilbur 'Hi-Fi' White, followed by his attempted seduction of a painter named Tommy Green. The characters in the sample reel McIlvaine shot and edited to send to Hollywood constantly blur the line between acting and not-acting—indeed the drunk characters seem actually to be drunk. In the portions for which film footage still exists, comic exaggeration sits side by side with extended, nonnarrative shots that provide a portrait of life on the West Side. A shot of the two militants strutting down 16th Street provides an opportunity to see both the façade of Art & Soul—with new, hip signage ('art & soul art gallery')—and Black Man's Dilemma, the mural by Don McIlvaine that replaced Sachio Yamashita's stripes on the side of the building.
Like [McIlvaine's other film Street Art in the Ghetto], [Back Alley Rip-Off] remained unfinished. The script is inspired both by local context and by the sense of possibility in Hollywood's newfound interest in Black subject matter that spawned the blaxploitation trend. The very character types suggest conflicting values: honest depiction, entertainment appeal, and the 'positive images' of the Black Arts Movement. Though the fiction film was obviously intended as a comedy, it also addressed the goal of portraying 'community activities' and 'behavioral patterns related to environmental surroundings'—thus channeling youth 'into constructive creative occupations.'" -– Zorach, pp. 277-278.
Note: while the film does have a magnetic soundtrack present, it does not contain any audio.
Main Credits
McIlvaine, Don (is filmmaker)
Form
Subjects
Related Place
Chicago (depicts)