Friday, October 10, 2008

Time-to-Run Review



Run for Your Life Review

"compelling is only the beginning... brutally truthful... a movie for anyone with a love for life and the need to celebrate our very existence, it provides hope out of nothing and a display of the ultimate will to succeed. This is a celebration... The spirit of the film brought tears to my eyes."

Friday, October 3, 2008

New York Giant

A new film brings the founder of the world's most celebrated marathon to life. By John Hanc

For New York City Marathon race director Fred Lebow, Marathon Sunday began Saturday night. Following the prerace pasta party, Lebow would be driven on the 26.2-mile course to make sure every pothole was filled, every illegally parked car towed. By 4 a.m., he was at the staging area, barking orders into a bullhorn, straightening barricades, inspecting the tautness of balloons, parrying journalists, and checking weather reports, according to biographer Ron Rubin. Later that afternoon, Lebow would leave the winners' press conference and head to Central Park, where he would high-five the back-of-the-pack finishers until dark.

This attention to detail, restless energy, and celebration of the elite and the everyman enabled Lebow to transform the race he cofounded in 1970 from Central Park curiosity-"Look at those guys running in circles!"-to one of the world's iconic events. Before his death in 1994, Lebow had redefined the marathon. What was once a for-serious-athletes-only event had become a people's parade, where runners of all ability levels could share one stage.

Lebow was a maverick, showman, charmer, oddball, hothead, and lothario-and filmmaker Judd Ehrlich shows it all in the documentary Run for Your Life. The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in April and will be available on DVD on October 28.

"The film captures the essence of the man, his history, New York City, and the running movement," says Gloria Averbuch, who worked with Lebow as media director of the New York Road Runners.

Like many native New Yorkers, Ehrlich has always viewed the NYC Marathon as a holiday. He knew Lebow was the founding father of the event, but he didn't grasp the significance of Lebow's influence on the sport until he met his nephew and heard more about the man born Ephraim Fishl Lebowitz in Romania in 1932.

Lebowitz immigrated to Manhattan in 1949, Americanized his name, and took up running. In 1969, he joined the New York Road Runners, and within a few years, he was club president. Lebow thought big-and his biggest idea was to move the marathon from the confines of Central Park to the streets of the city. Few thought it could be done, but Lebow's lobbying, cajoling, and occasional dissembling made the five-borough marathon a reality in 1976.

"Fred found the answer to life's problems, and it was running," says Ehrlich, a PBS documentarian. Indeed, Lebow was known to tout the sport's benefits to anyone who would listen, from journalists ("Ven are you going ta run da mara-ton?" he asked Tom Brokaw once) to passersby in Central Park. He helped create marathons in Chicago, Los Angeles, London, and Beijing, as well as many New York events, including the Empire State Building Run-Up and the Mini Marathon 10-K.

"Fred ignited what we know as the most popular participatory sport today," says Mary Wittenberg, president and CEO of the New York Road Runners. "He made running part of popular culture."

Lebow is still inspiring people to run his race. Ehrlich and the film's editor will be on the starting line November 2. "It was because we were watching Fred every day," Ehrlich says. "He convinced us."

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

The Independent on Run for Your Life




For Inspiration, Judd Ehrlich Looked to the Subject of His New Film, Run for Your Life: A look at the crowd-pleasing Fred Lebow biography that premiered at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival

While vampires made a big splash at this year's Tribeca Film Festival, a documentary about a son of Transylvania carved out a decidedly different niche for itself. Judd Ehrlich's heart-warming documentary Run for Your Life tells the story of Fred Lebow, the founder of the New York City Marathon, and the New York City Road Runners Club, one of the preeminent runners' organizations in the world. The doc has a lot going for it: great archival footage, a cool soundtrack, a large and fascinating supporting cast of talking heads, and at the center of it all, a main character who can't run well, yet makes marathoning his life's passion. Lebow is in many ways a dream subject: he beds women, garners celebrity, copes with scandal, invents sports marketing, wrestles with the demons of his past in war-torn Europe, and lives a life of such color and comedy that it could fill several films and a few books on the side. But faced with a bounty of material, filmmaker Judd Ehrlich had to make some tough choices. He talks about the film and its reception at Tribeca with The Independent's Mike Hofman.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Runner's World on Bill, Grete & Fred





Fred, Bill, Grete, the New York City Marathon, and a movie that tells all their stories by Amby Burfoot

I thought about Fred on Monday at a New York Road Runners luncheon that kicked off the organization's celebration of its 50th anniversary. Two of the New York City Marathon's greatest champions, Bill Rodgers and Grete Waitz, were invited to the lunch. That evening, we all attended a special screening of "Run For Your Life," a feature-length documentary movie about Fred and the Marathon. It's a quintessential and easy story to tell: Eastern European immigrant makes good in the big city, finds his passion (running in Fred's case), and combines his chutzpah and unflagging energy to turn that passion into a worldwide phenomenon.

I say "easy to tell" only to emphasize that this doesn't make it easy to film. That Judd Ehrlich's movie, "Run For Your Life", succeeds so spectacularly is a tribute to Ehrlich's own artistry, passion, and of course ... his chutzpah.

That evening, about 500 of us sat eagerly in our seats, waiting for the film to begin--Bill Rodgers, Mary Wittenberg, Kathrine Switzer, Bob Glover, Fred's sister Sarah, his nephew Moshe. But Grete Waitz wasn't one of us. She came to say hello and to greet friends before the movie started. But when the theater grew dark, she stood quietly and walked out.

Grete had told us earlier that she would do this. She is battling cancer herself--she looks and sounds great is about all I know, and all I can tell you--and she said she was worried that the movie would prove too emotional for her. This was probably a good decision. When the lights came back up 90 minutes later, there was scarcely a dry eye in the house.


Friday, May 23, 2008

Run for Your Blog






Drew Toal for Time Out New York
"3 out of 4 Stars. memorable... the can-do immigrant spirit that made this country great."
Watchdog Neil Best for Newsday
"interesting... emotional."
Scott Kasta for Movie Jungle
"surprisingly touching... fascinating... compelling."
Road to New York
"10 out of 10. The greatest biographical documentary I have ever seen... top notch... incredible... funny... touching... great filmmaking."
Sportsbiztech
"by the end, you’ll be cheering for Lebow."
Pigtails Flying
"marvelous and rich."
Run Dangerously
"fun and insightful... go see this movie!"
Sports and Shorts
"sports doc at its best... inspirational... highly recommended."
Maine Running Forum
"as intense of a movie moment I've ever experienced."
Running Chronicles
"truly inspirational... I recommend this film to everyone... people from all walks of life will be amazed."
La Bibliofille
"tells a powerful and moving story... Ehrlich brings a very personal touch."
Trakmaniak
"amazing... impressive and heart-warming... uplifting."
Filmicability with Dean Treadway
"Run For Your Life does what all fine docs do: it recounts a story we've never heard, but which has massive historical implications. It gives us a main character worthy of our attention. It has a complex structure that doesn't follow events as they happened in a timeline, but as they relate to one another. And it inventively illustrates its story with perceptive interviews, archive footage that's well-edited, and stunning graphic work. I also have to mention its incredible source-music soundtrack of past hit songs and present-day songs that should be hits. I've never been a runner--I'm too busy watching movies, so I've always found its appeal a bit mystifying--but now after seeing the inspiring Run For Your Life, I think I know what its point is."

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

IFC News: New York Characters


Caddy Audience Choice Award

Out of nearly 130 feature films at this year's festival, Run for Your Life is now in 6th place for the $25,000 Cadillac Audience Choice Award. Thanks to all the audience members who voted.

Today's Standings for The Cadillac Award
1. Pray the Devil Back to Hell
2. War Child
3. Gotta Dance
4. Playing for Change: Peace Through Music
5. Man on Wire
6. Run for Your Life
7. Under Our Skin
8. Kicking It
9. The Wackness
10. Fighter