Retro: The Unquiet American

CHAMELON STREET

Wendell B. Harris Jr.
USA 1989
94 min
V'09

This highly original existential black comedy (1991) charts the real-life exploits of William Douglas Street (played with a great deal of charisma and wit by writer-director Wendell B. Harris Jr.), a Detroit con man. From the late 70s to the mid-80s Street carried off a number of impersonations, presenting himself as a “Time” magazine reporter, a surgery intern (he ­performed 23 successful operations), a Caribbean exchange student at Yale, and a civil rights attorney; various other scams landed him in prison. Without wasting any time on facile psychologizing, Harris uses his subject as a means to explore the paradoxes of acting (some of Street’s real-life victims play themselves) and the invisibility of blacks in the U.S.; Street is also the source of some very funny comedy. In all, this disturbing yet compelling rogue’s progress calls to mind an 18th-century picaresque novel. Harris’s eclectic directorial style doesn’t always sustain itself, but it’s brimming with inventive ideas. R, 94 min.

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Credits
  • Wendell B. Harris Jr.
  • Henry Watkins
  • Anita Gordon
  • Dave Barber
  • Anthony Ennis
Dan Lawton
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