The 13 lessons provide the film’s structure, but within it, the meandering pace and lingering focus on everyday surfaces keep Leiter more obscured and contained than revealed, which I found unsatisfying. Most of the film was shot in Leiter’s studio in the East Village, where he’d lived since 1952, and cuts between Leiter speaking to the camera, making coffee, slowly rummaging through piles of film, prints, papers and boxes accrued over decades, and walking the streets near his studio looking for things to shoot. Leach’s awe of Leiter was palpable in the film and understandable - but it sometimes got in the way of his filmmaking it was visible in his choices to the point that it narrowed Leiter’s story and the viewer’s experience of it. Understated and quiet, the film follows Leiter around his life, self-consciously walking the line between wanting to get closer to the man and the artist while not wanting to be intrusive - a tension that runs through the film and gives a tentative, hesitant feel to the camera work and Leach’s side of the conversation. I’ve just watched In No Great Hurry: 13 Lessons in Life with Saul Leiter, a 2013 documentary by Tomas Leach.
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