

Soderbergh time-travels to 1968 to crash the weirdest film shoot you never heard of.
In the summer of 1968, a group of people assembled in Great Barrington, Massachusetts. They were making a film of John Barth's 1958 novel The End of the Road.
Direction
Soderbergh's obsessive archival resurrection.
Production
Gordon Willis and Michael Chapman shooting the breeze.

Director
Steven Soderbergh
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The 1970 End of the Road adaptation starring James Earl Jones and Stacy Keach was so troubled it barely released; this doc exists because Soderbergh personally rescued the production footage from obscurity.
This short is essentially Soderbergh processing his own anxieties about studio interference while paying tribute to the New Hollywood generation that briefly had it worse.
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