Full Description
Shopsin’s is the quintessential New York restaurant, inhabited by the equally prototypical New York chef, Kenny, in this character study par excellence. Shot on a shoestring and filled with images and ideas, I Like Killing Flies
documents a tiny family-owned and run Greenwich Village establishment that has become a neighborhood institution. But after 35 years, it has lost its lease and must face a difficult decision.
The Falstaff of his domain, Kenny is a person who can definitely be called a "character." Irascible and intermittently brilliant, he started cooking to earn a few extra bucks and now makes more than nine hundred different items,
including hundreds of soups and ethnic comfort food of every variety, from matzoh brei to postmodern pancakes. But his culinary legerdemain is only half of what you get when you enter his domain, and heaven help you if it’s
with a group of five. A true kitchen philosopher, Kenny’s observations about life, politics, food, and sex give this film a vitality that doesn’t let up.
Matt Mahurin adopts a haphazard shooting style that captures the unframeable energy of its hero in this film bursting with stove-top sensuality and a family and clientele often hostage to Kenny’s moods. I Like Killing Flies is a film about a Jewish working-class intellectual in a city in transition. I was desperate to eat at Shopsin’s by the end.
-- Geoffrey Gilmore, Sundance Film Festival
Filmmaker Bio(s)
Twenty years as an illustrator, photographer, film director and teacher.
Political and social illustrations for TIME, Newsweek, Mother Jones, Rolling Stone, Esquire, The London Observer and New York Times Op-Ed pages.
Contributed political drawings to the Los Angeles Times Sunday Op-Ed page for 22 years.
Photographic essays on The Homeless, People with AIDS, Texas prison system, Abortion clinics, mental hospitals, Nicaragua, Haiti, Belfast, Mexico, Japan and France.
Published three books of personal fine-art photographs.
Photographs in the permanent collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
Directed music videos for U2, REM, Tracy Chapman, Peter Gabriel, Sting, Bonnie Raitt, Ice-T, Metallica, David Byrne, and Joni Mitchell.
Wrote and directed the feature film, Mugshot which won best film at The 1996 Hamptons Film Festival.
Continues to teach workshops and lectures on the craft of image making at schools and professional organizations.
Lives in New York.