Film Review
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Anthony Peck / Daily Pilot
We’ve all been there -- well, most of us, anyway.
A night out. A few too many cocktails. And then the inevitable and
painful morning after, accompanied by a half-hearted declaration of “I’ll
never drink again.”
Sadly, this sequence of events -- at a much more frequent and severe
level of self-destruction -- is the life story of Newport Beach native
Mark David Allen.
Allen has the dubious distinction of holding Newport Beach’s all-time
record for arrests, having been jailed on more than 100 occasions for
public drunkenness.
Naturally, Newport jailer David J. Sperling had plenty of chances to meet
Allen, a familiar face in the city’s holding tank. So it was basically a
no-brainer for Sperling, moonlighting as a film director, to use Allen as
the subject of a documentary.
Now, just about anybody can follow around a drunk guy with a camcorder
for a couple of days to illustrate the destructive nature of alcohol
abuse. But Sperling’s film, running about 40 minutes, reaches much
deeper.
It covers a period of more than five years, in which viewers are
introduced to Allen and his troubled past, the Newport cops who bust him
and others who have tried unsuccessfully to help him kick the habit.
Sperling even travels to Hawaii to hunt down Allen, who at one point had
suddenly disappeared from the streets of Newport after accepting an
invitation from his brother to start over on the island of Oahu.
When Sperling is reunited with his subject, viewers may be shocked by the
drastic changes in Allen’s appearance, who clearly shows the signs of a
steady decline. They may not, however, be surprised to learn that Allen
had been arrested by Hawaii police more than 80 times.
It is a sad story, one that seemingly has only one possible ending, and
it is unlikely the audience will ever see a clearer view of the horrible,
life-consuming effects of severe alcohol abuse.
In fact, Sperling could probably sell many copies of the film to
Alcoholics Anonymous.
* “Drunk in Public” screens at 2 p.m. today at the Orange County Museum
of Art.
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