Doc Walks
We duck inside for the first time ever — into the Blanton Museum of Art, because it's pouring in Austin and Pete Muller had the brilliant idea to bring our show into a gallery. Pete is the National Geographic photographer behind BUCKS HARBOR, his five-years-in-the-making debut feature about lobster fishermen in Downeast Maine, premiering at Berlinale and playing Doc Days at the Austin Film Society. We wander past Jacob Lawrence and Andrew Wyeth and Jerry Bywaters' OIL FIELD GIRLS while Pete walks us through the family that made him: his grandfather Leon Kelly (one of the pioneers of American surrealism), his art-conservator father (who once paid him to spit into a beaker so he could clean centuries-old paintings), and the paternity bombshell in his twenties that preceded his career embedded in conflict zones in Africa and the Middle East. We dig into BUCKS HARBOR's sea critter metaphors, the editor Noel Paul who shaped hundreds of hours with a special structure, the Hiss Golden Messenger song that lands just as it's needed, and Pete's gentle insistence that "fly on the wall" is a lie — the camera is always doing something. Plus: the most admissible form of male feeling and why art belongs to everyone (no whispering required). DISCUSSION LINKS: BUCKS HARBOR (2026) [https://www.berlinale.de/en/2026/programme/202604750.html] | THE FEARLESS FREAKS (2005) [https://www.primevideo.com/detail/0GYYO8D151HTS7SMZ4TPUPCW1R] | BOMBAY BEACH (2011) [https://www.justwatch.com/us/movie/bombay-beach] TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 Whispering into the Blanton — our first indoor episode 01:00 Jacob Lawrence and the Great Migration 03:00 Andrew Wyeth's SEA LEGS, painting the same people for decades 06:00 Pete's grandfather Leon Kelly — American surrealism 08:00 Crescent Fellowship, Paris 1925, André Breton 11:00 Why Pete won't call himself an artist 13:00 Mom the nighttime newspaper photographer in Lynn, MA 14:00 Dad the art conservator (and the beaker of spit) 17:00 Making art about practical, rough-and-tumble people 20:00 Thomas Hart Benton, folk + high-brow, painting on board 25:00 OIL FIELD GIRLS by Jerry Bywaters 28:00 How BUCKS HARBOR began — five years in Downeast Maine 29:00 The paternity reveal that sent Pete chasing masculinity 32:00 Cross-cultural masculinity from Sudan to New England 34:00 Anger as the only admissible male feeling 38:00 Dave's teeth, Mark's drag — lobsters molt, men molt 42:00 Mark the lobster-trap-maker as 50,000-follower TikTok star 45:00 Bill Viola, Alice Neel, Deborah Roberts 50:00 Editor Noel Paul, hundreds of hours, four-and-a-half years filming 53:00 Nathan Golden on cinematography, a shared visual language 55:00 What does "directing" a documentary even mean 58:00 Why "fly on the wall" is a lie 01:02 Festival run: Berlinale → True/False → Doc Days → Margaret Mead → Seattle 01:03 Score by Nikolai Hess + Hiss Golden Messenger end credits 01:06 Bombay Beach as inspiration 01:07 Advice: keep it cheap and close
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