REVIEW: CALIFORNIA DREAMIN' (2001) I promised a review of this in my last post, 2024-07-20.2Pulling_Documentary_Dreams_from_DVD.txt, indeed I intended to write one. But I never got to it. Now I'm tired out from too many projects (most incomplete/unsuccesful), and only have half an hour, which seems to be my common state lately (hence the pause in new posts), but I might as well cross this off my mental to-do list. Even with the English narration, this German documentary series presents a distinctly foreign viewpoint on California, USA. There's a common theme of following the cultural and physical exports from this distinctive American state back to their origins. This becomes a reflection on the changes since its drug-fueled cultural boom in the sixties, contrasting with the tech industry transforming places into a millionaire's playground. In between, with a sly remark from the deep-voiced narrator, it delights in spinning off onto a completely different topic: the habits of the local sea otters, a woman who telepathically communicates with people's pets, an old mining ghost town, or a man who rides his BMX bike on the roof of his house. It's a nice style that's open to examining deep social issues without needing to funnel itself down a specific narrative. It's most consistent theme is definately reflecting on the sixties, reinforced by a soundtrack built from that decade's greatest west-coast hits, and often pairing up with the surviving artists behind such music to hear their perspectives in some interesting interviews. As someone also aware of California mainly through the products of culture, entertainment, and technology that it's exported worldwide, this five-part series was facinating to me. The time of its filming is also great, with California in the middle of transfroming world society again, this time through the business-driven potential of the internet rather than the commercially ambivalent hippy, surfer, and biker cultures of the sixties. But filmed before the larger transformative effects of the internet had really taken root, as well as seemingly prior to the cultural impact of the 9/11 attacks on the other side of the country. I definately recommend the series, and I'm definately over my allocated time to write about it now too! https://archive.org/details/2001-california-dreamin-dvd - The Free Thinker