Rebecca Miller presents a portrait of her father, the prolific American playwright Arthur Miller.Rebecca Miller presents a portrait of her father, the prolific American playwright Arthur Miller.Rebecca Miller presents a portrait of her father, the prolific American playwright Arthur Miller.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination
Photos
Robert A. Miller
- Self - Arthur and Mary's Son
- (as Bob Miller)
Joan Allen
- Self
- (archive footage)
Robert Breuler
- Self
- (archive footage)
Joan Copeland
- Self - Arthur's Younger Sister
- (archive footage)
Peter Falk
- Self
- (archive footage)
Clark Gable
- Self
- (archive footage)
John Guare
- Self
- (archive footage)
J. Edgar Hoover
- Self
- (archive footage)
John Huston
- Self
- (archive footage)
Lyndon B. Johnson
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (as Lyndon Johnson)
Elia Kazan
- Self
- (archive footage)
John Howard Lawson
- Self
- (archive footage)
Arthur Miller
- Self
- (archive footage)
Fran Miller
- Self - Arthur's Sister-in-Law
- (archive footage)
Jane Miller
- Self - Arthur and Mary's Daughter
- (archive footage)
- (voice)
Kermit Miller
- Self - Arthur's Older Brother
- (archive footage)
Storyline
Featured review
I watch a lot of documentaries, especially those involving film, entertainment, or the arts in some capacity. It is a genre that I very much enjoy (when done right, of course). What I found here, however, was a doc that seemed to be lacking a clear focus or solid production values, producing an experience that was decidedly blasé pretty much all the way through.
Probably the key thing to understand about "Arthur Miller: Writer" is this: if you are looking for an in-depth analysis of Miller's plays, you are in the wrong place. While the plays are discussed, obviously, the fare here is much more focused on his family/personal life. In that sense, this doc is pretty straightforward in terms of scope. It starts at the beginning of Miller's life and progresses right along to the end.
The good stuff here is when connections are made between Miller's plays and the events that shaped his real life. To be honest, that is probably why most people are watching this to begin with (having experienced one of his plays). The middle sections of this roughly 100-minute piece are the best in this regard, as they mesh well the era of his biggest plays and his observations about them.
What I really didn't like about "Writer", however, is that it almost feels like more of a stitched-together amalgam of other documentaries as opposed to one with a clear message or focus. Ostensibly, it seems to favor his daughter's home video interviews of him, but the problem of course is that those videos by themselves aren't worthy of outside viewing, as home videos so often turn out to be. They need context, and most of the time "Writer" fails (or at best barely succeeds) in providing that valuable component.
Overall, I found myself getting distracted a lot and losing focus when it came to watching this, a problem I am usually not afflicted with when it comes to documentaries. Like I've said, I think this is primarily because the entire piece seems pieced together, with far too much focus on Arthur's strictly personal life, leaving a gaping hole in what we all wanted to see: more connective tissue involving his plays.
Probably the key thing to understand about "Arthur Miller: Writer" is this: if you are looking for an in-depth analysis of Miller's plays, you are in the wrong place. While the plays are discussed, obviously, the fare here is much more focused on his family/personal life. In that sense, this doc is pretty straightforward in terms of scope. It starts at the beginning of Miller's life and progresses right along to the end.
The good stuff here is when connections are made between Miller's plays and the events that shaped his real life. To be honest, that is probably why most people are watching this to begin with (having experienced one of his plays). The middle sections of this roughly 100-minute piece are the best in this regard, as they mesh well the era of his biggest plays and his observations about them.
What I really didn't like about "Writer", however, is that it almost feels like more of a stitched-together amalgam of other documentaries as opposed to one with a clear message or focus. Ostensibly, it seems to favor his daughter's home video interviews of him, but the problem of course is that those videos by themselves aren't worthy of outside viewing, as home videos so often turn out to be. They need context, and most of the time "Writer" fails (or at best barely succeeds) in providing that valuable component.
Overall, I found myself getting distracted a lot and losing focus when it came to watching this, a problem I am usually not afflicted with when it comes to documentaries. Like I've said, I think this is primarily because the entire piece seems pieced together, with far too much focus on Arthur's strictly personal life, leaving a gaping hole in what we all wanted to see: more connective tissue involving his plays.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Arthur Miller: Yazar
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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Top Gap
By what name was Arthur Miller: Writer (2017) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer