Heaven Knows What
$12 General Admission
$9 Student/Senior
$7 Member
About
Josh and Benny Safdie are drawn to direct movies about unusually charismatic people. Their last film mined the Icarus style story of Lenny Cooke, an NBA wannabe who narrowly missed his chance to call Lebron James his colleague. Daddy Longlegs channeled memories of the brothers’ own distinctive dad. The Safdies share this impulse for human magnetism with their influence Martin Bell, who directed the searing, classic Seattle documentary Streetwise. Bell once remarked that every movie needs a star. His was a 13-year-old sex worker named Tiny.
Josh met Arielle in New York’s Diamond District one day while doing research for another film and promptly hitched his wagon to the young woman’s sparkling ferocity. Arielle soon revealed that she was 19 and homeless, with addictions to heroin and an abusive boyfriend named Ilya. Josh asked her to write down the story of her life on the streets, so she typed it out on the sly at Apple stores. Abandoning their other film, the Safdies made Arielle’s story into the script for Heaven Knows What (the resulting memoir, Mad Love in New York City will be published soon). Arielle plays a version of herself in the film, with the rest of the cast fleshed out by her real friends and acquaintances, including the endlessly wired Buddy Duress. One of the only professional actors is Caleb Landry-Jones (X-Men: First Class, Byzantium) who portrays the alluringly nihilistic Ilya.