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LET'S GO ALL THE WAYImmersionists Who Go So Far in They Can't Get OutLike a jackknife disappearing into the dark fissure of society’s twisted bowels, the new immersionists are stabbing themselves deep into their subject and not coming out until the wounds heal. The idea of immersionism has been around since George Orwell lived as a bum for Down and Out in Paris and London. Pioneers such as Fred Wiseman continued the cause in the 60s, spending years alongside his subjects. However, this new wave differs from documentaries like High School because Wiseman didn’t literally go back to school to get his story. He just filmed high school kids. No, this current wave of immersionists has people like photojournalist Lanre Feintola doing smack and crack for nine years as a way to infiltrate the milieu of junkies. Just as we’ve had gonzo literary figures like ivy-league-educated author William Vollmann fucking transsexuals while freebasing as research for his novels, we now see the same anti-tourist shenanigans popping up in film. Nobody sums up the new immersionism better than Leo Regan. In 1992, the 27-year-old photojournalist shot the audience at a Skrewdriver show and ended up fascinated with a band of ultra-violent British skinheads in the neo-nazi gang “Combat 18.” For two years he ran with them, documented their violence and became involved in their personal lives, all of which coalesced into a published book. “They were intrigued by me,” he says. “They were just kind of baffled by my presence and kind of adopted me in a way.” Simultaneously, his friend Lanre Feintola delved into the marginalized world of addicts and prostitutes and stayed there for almost a decade, becoming lost in the woods. Lanre’s book never quite materialized and he slipped further and further into heroin. A decade later, Regan traded his Nikon for a digital video camera and started making documentaries for British TV, following up on the skins and tracking down Lanre. He found two similarly pathetic stories of completely deluded bullshitters too full of their failed ideologies to function. Regan’s films 100% White (a celluloid update on an immersionist nazi photo journal) and Cold Turkey (an immersionist documentary on a failed junkie immersionist) are like watching that bald cult guy they found with his Nikes in place and his balls cut off and actually understanding him as a person. You’re seeing dysfunctional clichés (skins, junkies) tapping the snooze until all of a sudden they’re middle-aged, abandoned by their wives and kids. Scary thing is you begin to understand the reality of who these people really are for a change. You actually care about them. We met Leo Regan in London recently and asked his Irish ass why he would bother aiming a ten-year microscope at the scum of the earth. “Why do I waste years of my life on these projects?” he yelled back incredulously from a pub in Camden. “To spend time in that part of society that in normal circumstances I would have no access to, no understanding of, it somehow gives me some kind of faith in humanity. That might sound very strange to you, but I think it makes sense. I come out of these things thinking it’s our problem; it’s not their problem. We as a society are deeply flawed!” At the core of the film 100% White is the violent psychopath Neil, who couldn’t remember the amount of people he’s stabbed when asked for an estimate. Neil is now undergoing anger management counseling and eating at Pakistani restaurants, accepting that it’s impossible to chase the bastards out. “I’ve tried to cut them out. It don’t work,” is Neil’s exact quote.
“Some of the things he’s done, I can’t even bear to hear them to be honest with you,” Regan explains of Neil. “It makes you sick to your stomach some of the things he’s been responsible for. But as an individual, I have to say I do like the man. That contrast is very disturbing for me and I think it adds a power to the thing. I mean, I see somewhere in him a humanity of someone trying to break free.
It’s amazing to watch how Lanre lives in a palatial apartment with a full-blown habit and no job, surviving this way for over a decade. “You saw yourself, he’s a great bullshitter,” Leo adds, “and he managed to convince the housing association to house him. The social welfare system is quite good and you can use it to your advantage.”
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