Floyd Webb on Wed, 9 May 2007 15:53:44 +0200 (CEST)
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<nettime-ann> LOOPTOPIA: THE SEARCH FOR COUNT DANTE (Modified by Geert Lovink)
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- To: geert@xs4all.nl
- Subject: <nettime-ann> LOOPTOPIA: THE SEARCH FOR COUNT DANTE (Modified by Geert Lovink)
- From: "Floyd Webb" <floyd@3to1studios.com>
- Date: Wed, 9 May 2007 08:17:47 -0500
.
Special Preview Screening of The Search for Count Dante,
a documentary work-in-progress at LOOPTOPIA.
http://thesearchforcountdante.com/html/looptopia5_11.html
Friday, May 11, at the Project 3to1 Film Festival
Fine Arts Building, 410 S Michigan Ave., Suite 421
Screening Times to be announced.
Contact: Floyd Webb
708-704-1482
In the 1960s and 70s, his scowl was unmistakable and his kung fu pose
conveyed a menace that went beyond martial arts mastery. He called
himself Count Dante and he claimed to be "The Deadliest Man Alive" in
garish comic book ads and gruesome instructional manuals. While his
name and title may have been more show biz than lineage, his drive to
live up to his fearsome reputation left one man dead and a promising
career in ruins.
Count Dante's real name was John Keehan and he grew up in a posh
section of Chicago. In the early 1960s he was one of the most
intriguing figures in America's nascent martial arts scene. Bruce Lee
and Chuck Norris were his contemporaries, but Keehan's appetite for
self-promotion was greater than a movie star's. When he wasn't putting
on karate tournaments, he was styling hair and courting Playboy
Bunnies. He was one part "Black Belt Jones" and one part Warren Beatty
from "Shampoo." He challenged Muhammad Ali, tested his hand speed
against a quick draw artist, and kept an African lion as a house
pet.
But as the 1960s gave way to the 70s, Keehan could no longer separate
himself from the macho marketing tool that he created. Rival dojos were
stormed, the life of Keehan's best friend was lost and Dante became
involved in the Purolator Armored Car Robbery in 1974 that netted four
million dollars. Soon after the robbery, Dante mysteriously died and
was buried in an unmarked grave.
The documentary film "The Search for Count Dante" is filmmaker Floyd
Webb's personal journey into the Dante legend. Webb explores how a rich
kid from Chicago became the self-proclaimed "Crown Prince of Death" all
told against the backdrop of social change during the 1960s and 70s and
the emergence of martial arts in American popular
consciousness.
For this film, Webb has interviewed a cast of characters that is as
colorful as The Count himself that includes karate champions, mob
informants and trash talking tai chi masters. Count Dante's story is
one that begins with the promise of athletic glory and ends with one of
the most lucrative heists in the history of American criminal
enterprise.
Interviewed: Attorney Bob Cooley, Ken Knudson, Jimmy Jones, Bob Brown,
Ronald Duncan, Angelo Dundee, Nganga Tolo Na(Ray Cooper), British
Science Fiction writer Robert Rankin and many others.
---
Floyd Webb
3to1 Studios, LLC
http://3to1studios.com
410 S. Michigan Ave
Chicago, IL 60605
312-281-2288 office
708-704-1482 cell
312-233-2780 skype
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