Memoir

How I Got Kicked Out of the New York Film Festival

The Eighth New York Film Festival opened with Truffaut's L'Enfant Sauvage—and ended for one wild child when he pushed his luck with Truffaut a little too far

The year was 1970. I was an introverted high school kid in Brooklyn who was mesmerized by film. Far removed from Kings County lay my Mecca, the New York Film Festival, a showcase for French New Wave, Italian, British, Third World Cinema and New Hollywood movies.

I had no money, and there was the matter of attending school, but I felt I had to go to the festival. Succumbing to the magical, corrupting power of the movies, I went against my mild, obedient, ethical character and decided to pretend to be a film journalist.

I applied for a press pass as a writer for Rolling Stone, having heard they sometimes used teenage correspondents. And, since they were located in faraway San Francisco, I figured I had a shot at the deception.

Lo and behold I was given a press pass. I watched four movies a day: films by Chabrol, Bertolucci, Truffaut, Rafelson, Godard, Herzog, and Ray. I also got the chance to see many great directors in-person I had read about in my film magazines.

But then I decided to push my luck and go for broke.

I requested an interview with Francois Truffaut.

This was my downfall. The man who ran the press office made some calls. I was summoned to the office and told I had “a helluva nerve.” I was ordered to immediately leave Lincoln Center.

I was deeply shaken. I didn’t attend the NYFF for years.  But being caught at my hoax was in some way a relief—I have no idea what I would have asked Truffaut had I met him.

This story is part of the September-October 2012 issue of Film Comment.

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