Maysles’ posthumous doc chronicles colorful ‘Iris’

  • By Robert Horton Herald Movie Critic
  • Wednesday, May 6, 2015 3:16pm
  • LifeGo-See-Do

When Albert Maysles died on March 5, it was the end of a significant phase of the documentary film.

His movies, many of them made with his late brother David, helped create a new kind of nonfiction storytelling: “Gimme Shelter” set the standard for the rock-and-roll picture and defined the end of the 1960s, and “Grey Gardens,” a portrait of two crackpot relatives of Jackie Kennedy, remains a cult movie to this day (and a useful conversation piece about the place where observation and exploitation cross paths).

What was this documentary giant working on at the end? He has at least one more film yet to be released, but among his final projects was the somewhat unexpected, but very entertaining “Iris.”

It’s a profile of Iris Apfel, a nonagenarian fashion legend and colorful collector (and wearer) of baubles, bangles, and beads. (The soundtrack of the movie is accompanied by the clacking of Iris’s Bundt-cake-sized bracelets.)

If this seems a fluffy subject for Maysles, perhaps the comparison with “Grey Gardens” is useful: zany ladies, full of opinions, dressed to kill. And yet, the subjects of the two films don’t compare; where the Beale women of “GG” had long since parted ways with common sense, the outrageous-looking Iris is resplendent with it.

She goes to thrift stores and haggles over already-inexpensive merchandise; she shrugs at the idea of criticizing the fashion choices of others (“Who am I to tell them how to look?”). She’s had a happy marriage — hubby Carl turns 100 during filming — and the Apfels ran a successful business for decades, manufacturing classic textile designs for clients that include the White House.

Some people love “Grey Gardens” because the Beales remain defiantly themselves, despite their creepy existence in a decaying mansion. “Iris” takes up the same theme, but with a happier outcome. Yes, Iris and Carl are eccentric — their Palm Beach home is so crammed with toys and doo-dads, one expects them to start feeding the raccoons up in the attic — but brimming with self-possession.

We watch Iris travel, pose for magazine layouts, and then honestly describe the toll these activities take on someone in her early 90s. Despite the gaudy accessories, this isn’t fantasy land.

“Iris” (3 stars)

An entertaining documentary about Iris Apfel, a nonagenarian fashion maven. Veteran director Albert Maysles finds Iris to be a fun lady with a philosophy based on being authentic and wearing lots of bracelets, but the movie’s also a portrait of someone who is comfortable in her own skin.

Rating: PG-13, for language

Showing: Egyptian

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