Last night, the Brooklyn Academy of Music
opened BAMcinemaFest with the New York premiere of director Richard
Linklater’s Boyhood. The film not only evokes the trials and
tribulations of coming of age, it captures the real-life transformation
of its star, Ellar Coltrane, as he grows from six to eighteen in the span of 166 minutes.
“I wanted the whole canvas of childhood,” said Linklater,
for whom the film’s twelve-year investment was necessary. “It was the
only way to tell this story.” Centering a film on an unknown
six-year-old might sound like a risk, to which Linklater asks, “How much
do you want to worry about your life? Or do you just want to live it? “

At the after-party at Skylight One Hanson, nachos, snow cones, Dark Horse wine, and lollipops kept guests like Maggie Gyllenhaal, Jenna Lyons, Imogen Poots, David Byrne, and Jenny Slate feeling like kids after the film ended. Leaning shyly against a marble column of the historic site, Coltrane blushed as admirers complimented his work.



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