As the film opens, Julius in voice over, tries to
distinguish the artists from those who are just looking for attention, the difference
between art and simple tagging. The movie basically stays with him and his
perspective. There is quite a bit of pseudo-philosophical musing on his part.
He says things like: “The bottom line is with the past there is no future.
Remember that. You have to have a past to have a future.” Did he just
contradict himself there? Well, it’s clear this isn’t the brightest guy around.
There is also a whole lot of bragging. “I’ll always be relevant,” he
tells us. And he says, “We took this to a whole nother level.” By the
way, everyone, “nother” is not a word. The word you’re looking for is
“other.” Remember that.
The filmmaker does ask him why he chose spray paint as
his method of self-expression, and he tells the story of being young and seeing
two kids spray painting a train. And that moment had a strong impact on him. To
the director’s credit, she also asks him, “What do you think about
expressing yourself on other people’s property?” He tells her: “I never
personally, like, spray painted on somebody’s car or I spray painted on
somebody’s house. I did tag my name on mailboxes, trucks, anything commercial.”
He says he only spray painted on public property “because I am the public.”
He does talk about joining a gang, and about leaving it.
And he tells us where the name T-Kid 170 comes from. And when he’s not
bragging, he does have a few interesting things to say. Like about getting
legitimate jobs. But this documentary is a bit messy, and it’s difficult to
know just when certain things occurred. And a lot of shots just aren’t properly
identified. For example, there is a shot of him with Brian Grazer, but no
explanation of how this meeting came about, or when, or where. Plus, there is a
lot of poor-quality old video. And for such a short film (it’s only 49 minutes,
though Amazon currently lists the length as 94 minutes), there is some
pointless stuff, like several moments of him trying to pronounce “Champs-Élysées”
while he’s in France.
There are brief snippets of interviews with other
graffiti artists, but this isn’t any kind of in-depth documentary on the
subject of graffiti. No other perspectives are really presented. For example,
we don’t hear from the people who own the property that’s been vandalized. We
don’t hear from the police. I thought it might also be interesting to hear from
the guys whose job it is to clean up graffiti. And I wish the people who had
hired Julius Cavero for legitimate jobs had been interviewed. This documentary
is essentially a puff piece. At one point Julius actually says, “We was doing
masterworks of art on subway cars.” Wow.
The Nasty Terrible T-Kid 170: Julius Cavero was
directed by Carly Starr Brullo-Niles, and is scheduled to be released on DVD on
May 20, 2016 through MVD Visual. The DVD contains no special features.
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