Lenny Bruce: Swear to Tell the Truth Movie Review
Lenny Bruce: Swear to Tell the Truth Review
"Lenny Bruce: Swear to Tell the Truth" Overview

Rating: NR
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Robert WeideProducer : Robert Weide
Screenwiter : Robert Weide
Starring : Robert De Niro,Steve Allen,Kitty Bruce,Lenny Bruce,Martin Garbus,Nat Hentoff,Paul Krassner,Sally Marr
Having proved his ability to handle writing and producing narrative film with
Mother Night, Robert Weide and the crew of WhyADuck productions take on a much
more difficult medium with Lenny Bruce: Swear to tell the Truth. The
documentary, highly easy to do badly, can be just as emotional touching, just
as engaging as the narrative film. The majority of them, obviously, are not.
A very select few are able to touch you like the narrative film can, are able
to pull you in and make you experience them.
I have seen probably fifty documentaries in my time. I have reviewed four of
them. Only two of the documentaries I have ever seen have been able to engage
me like Lenny Bruce: Swear to tell the Truth did.
Lenny Bruce: Swear to tell the Truth tells of social satirist and comedian
Lenny Bruce, who, in the process of exercising his own personal demons,
offended just about everyone and made a good half of us laugh during the
1960s. All right, I wasn't even alive in the 1960s, but he still was capable
of making me laugh even after his death.
We've probably heard his name mentioned. We may even know a few of his bits.
Lenny's humor, as the documentary illustrates, was often marked towards the
Catholic church. It took on issues that America simply did not want to talk
about and stuck them right out in the open. He became a marked man, offending
the wrong people and getting arrested in nearly every city in America for
obscenity or drug charges. However, he stuck to his guns about opposing the
hypocrisy in everyday life, something which we now admire in comedians such as
John Leguizamo (from Freak: "Dad, why don't you just quit drinking? Because I'm
not a quitter") and Chris Rock (from Bigger and Blacker: "Old black men didn't
have to deal with that I can't get a cab shit. He was the cab."). It was a
position that cost him his career, his fortune, and, eventually, his life.
Sparsely narrated by Robert De Niro and composed mostly of archival footage,
you are given the feeling that you are not as much watching a documentary as
watching a story unfold…the exact goal of good documentaries.
The film is short, bittersweet, and to the point. It is reminiscent of Julian
Schnabel's first and only film, Basquiat, which paints a similar portrait of
the lives of Andy Warhol and Jean Michael Basquiat, both pop artists who died
tragically. It also reminds me personally of my friend Ronald G. Shafer's
documentary Donald Hall and Jane Kenyon: "Keeping you Safe Beside Me", about
the tragic death of poet Jane Kenyon.
The lesson to be learned from this would be simply that, occasionally, true
life is better than fiction. The truth is better than what we concoct. And,
if shown properly, it can bring you to the point of tears in a way all the more
powerful because of its truth.
[Powerful documentary about America's legendary "obscene" comic. Provides
excellent insight into the life of a man hounded by the law over his comedy act
to the point of drug abuse and eventually death. Bruce was such a pioneer for
the first amendment, you really have to lend the man a hand. Thanks to his
vigilance, he was the last performer to be tried for obscenity in the U.S. An
amazing guy and a good retelling of his life. -Ed.]
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Review by James Brundage
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