Buskers

Get under the skin of this timeless urban figure, before it vanishes from our squares and street corners, for good.

Buskers Mad Chad Taylor, the renowned chainsaw juggler, has created a one-of-a-kind documentary that delves inside the world of street performers. The tightrope walker, the razor blade muncher, the sidewalk samurai and the beautiful blue girls - one performer after another pulls back the makeshift curtain to reveal a battle which is as much for love as it is for survival.
"When my show's going well I feel invincible, like a higher being", says Flying Bob. For the last ten minutes he held an audience in the palm of his hand. But now the spell is broken, the audience begins to chatter and get on with their lives. "If I don't make enough money to get home, I will stay and breed with the locals", jokes Dexter Tripp the trapeze artist. But his voice belies a powerlessness, which is both gift and curse of the trade.

"On the street if you're not constantly talking, doing something, people will just walk away", explains Matt the escape artist. Yet the performers wouldn't swap the freedom of this occupation for anything. "We're a rebel sort of people", says Jeep who runs a dog show "we work on the street because then we can do whatever we want". For society's misfits, the street offers a moment of adoration which is addictive.

"What do I get out of performing?" says Michael the juggler "I get to get along with people for half an hour". Whilst for the Blue Girls, it is only "in the fabulous worlds that we are making, that we are breathing again, we're alive!"

But the pressure is mounting, "rent is due and you're thinking "well I hope it doesn't rain!" Performers pick fights with each other over pitches"she said she was only going to be half an hour!" The crowd is losing interest - "if this is boring, why don't you just go somewhere else you losers!" The trapeze artist falls to rapturous applause.

"I've broken each wrist, countless ribs", he says. But physical costs are not the only pay-off of this all-consuming trade. "I haven't spoken to my son for 12 months", admits Gazzo the magician. "My obsession with my work did lead to the breakdown of my marriage", Michael confides.

Risking injury, arrest and fights over pitches, the Buskers throw themselves wholeheartedly into the roulette wheel of life, all for the unpredictable love of the crowd. "You lose that dream [of fame and fortune] you're finished", says Tony, who lost all of his teeth in his fire-eating act. From the heights of artistry to the depths of hunger, this is the human condition at its most freakishly wonderful.


Laurel Best Film, DIY Film Festival 2008


Laurel Official Selection, Santa Cruz Film Festival 2008


Laurel Official Selection, Coney Island Film Festival 2008

FULL SYNOPSIS

The Producers


A twisted product of Dogtown USA, Mad Chad got his start juggling at age 13 on the Venice beach board walk. Since then, he's ridden his skateboard to stardom, performing his highly participatory brand of comedy in in 49 of 50 states. This Guinness world Record holder has juggled everything from working video cameras to a bowling ball that he can catch with his head.

Making The Film


In Buskers, Chad Taylor travels to some of the most famous street performance pitches around the world and captures legendary performers in action, both on stage as well as behind the scenes. This documentary is a collage of images, experiences and stories from some of the world's most well respected street performers. Taylor lets the performers speak for themselves on just about everything that relates to their lifestyle: their love of performing, unhappy childhoods, personal relationships, the steep learning curve, competing for prime spots and dealing with audiences and the police. Since street performers have more than their fair share of unusual experiences, this documentary is chock full of anecdotes worth telling.

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