Geronimo1967
I wasn't really quite sure what to expect here but one thing's for sure - it really only regurgitates the stories any fan of James Dean will already know. It uses photography and brief clips from his early television advertising roles to give us a clue as to his rise to fame, and then events take their historical course with little augmentation from the assembled opinions. Of course, it is never a good idea to speak ill of the dead - but here nobody really says anything remotely insightful to help us get into the psyche of this handsome but flawed man. William Bast perhaps comes closest to offering us some sort of "revelation" about his friend, but even then it's all tempered by an obvious affection and he comes across as if holding back. W...