To My Great Chagrin: The Unbelievable Story of Brother Theodore (2007) - To My Great Chagrin: The Unbelievable Story of Brother Theodore (2007) - User Reviews - IMDb
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7/10
Record of a dead being...
Lilcount15 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
The late performance artist Theodore Gottlieb, known professionally as Brother Theodore, was an institution in the Greenwich Village art scene for over four decades. His work was unique and no doubt was admired by and influenced the likes of Woody Allen, Eric Bogosian, Spalding Gray, and numberless others, although to pigeonhole him as a mere monologist is to do him a grave injustice. His brand of paranoia, philosophy, schizophrenia, irony, and comedy is inimitable, since it is unthinkable that a man born, in his own words, with "a golden spoon" in his mouth, should lose everything and live to tell the tale in 94 remarkable years.

Director Jeff Sumerel spent a few days filming him just months before his death, and added to that excerpts from numerous recorded live performances and acting jobs.

I must warn you, Brother Theodore is on camera in every single shot of this doc, and except for the talk show hosts and the odd other actor, nobody else appears. Numerous interviewees are heard but never seen. This is an understandable artistic decision on the director's part, but a bit taxing on the viewer.

Chess played a great role in Theodore's life, and several internationally ranked chess masters, myself included, were in the audience at the world premiere at MOMA on Feb. 13, 2008. I was the recipient of a typical rant when he called the Manhattan Chess Club in 1990 to complain in those pre-internet days that we weren't updating our results of the Kasparov-Karpov match fast enough. A day or so later, updates complete, a familiar voice left a two word message on our answering machine, "Thank you."
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10/10
A brilliant film about a brilliant man
claster12 August 2009
This is a brilliant film about a brilliant man, one Theodore Gottleib, also known for a time as "Brother Theodore." Sumerel has accomplished the impossible, in weaving a mesmerizing tale out of not much surviving footage. Even if you'd never heard of Theodore, you'd find it a riveting profile. And if you're fortunate enough to have either seen him perform, or be exposed to his peculiar genius, you'll learn a great deal about his amazing life. This film, now known as "To My Great Chagrin: The Unbelievable Life of Brother Theodore," should be given a much wider audience. In the meantime, do whatever you must to see it. You'll make the acquaintance of a unique individual whom you'll never forget.
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3/10
A Huge Disappointment
arfdawg-114 November 2020
Brother Theodore was a genius. I saw him at the 13th Street Theatre back in 1982 with Billy Crystal in front of me scouting him for his then variety show.

He was brilliant. Crystal thought he was too edgy but put him on the show anyway.

It's with great remorse that I must report this documentary does nt do justice to the man or the artist.

There are many things wrong with this documentary. The show clips of Theodore at various ages in his career over laid upon each other doing the exact same routine. It makes it seem like he was a one trick pony.

They present as facts biography information that Gottlieb provded himself and most think he just made up over the years.

A lot of the clips are of Theodore at his prime, but there are a number of clips of him toward the end of his life and he is very frail. He can't get that powerful effect in his voice anymore.

They pay little attention in an interview with the son he abandoned for 40-some years. And that brings us to the other big issue. It's filled with interviews with lots of people but you don't see them. Much of the time you have no idea who they are and they don't even provide subtitles telling us who is speaking.

I made out Penn Jillette and Dick Cavett, but that's it.

It's really too bad. Brother Theodore was so much better than this fiasco.
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