A Gray State *** ½ / *****
Directed by: Erik Nelson.
I have never been much into
conspiracy theories, which is perhaps why I had not heard of David Crowley, or
the movie he was going to make – Gray State – which documented a time in the
not too distant future when the government was going to crack down on its
citizens, and kill or enslave them. Crowley became a big hit in the Libertarian
and conspiracy theory circles – he supported Ron Paul for President, and was a
fan of Alex Jones. A veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, Crowley may have been
affected by PTSD or some other mental disorder because of his time on the
battlefield – its impossible to say really – but we do know that when he was
Stop-Lossed (the military term for when they refuse to let you leave the
military, even after your time is supposed to be up – he started to grow more
paranoid and distrustful of the government. When he finally did get out, he
embraced conspiracy theories, and set about making a trailer for his purposed
movie. The plan was to film the trailer, get funded on Kickstarter in order to
be able to write the movie (which he did) and then go to Hollywood, script in
hand, to get $30 million to make his would be masterpiece. He got a hell of a
lot closer than most would have to making that happen.
That all came to an end in
January 2015 when Crowley, his wife Komel and their daughter Rainya were found
shot to death in their homes. After a year of investigating, the police closed
the case – determining that David killed his family, then too his own life.
Others in the conspiracy theory world are still not convinced – seeing yet
another government conspiracy.
A Gray State, a documentary by
Erik Nelson, examines the life of David Crowley, and his work, and ultimately
his death. After he gives a few minutes, early in the documentary, to a few of
the voices who are convinced this is all a government ruse, he examines Crowley
life in the military, his work in trying to get his movie off the ground, and
finally his unravelling mental state in the months leading up to his death.
Those conspiracy theorists at the beginning of the movie probably won’t like
the rest of it – it comes together as one sad, tragic portrait of a man who
eventually will kill his daughter, wife and then himself. As someone says to
Nelson late in the film “You’re not missing anything but the why – and you’ll
never get that”. And he’s right.
Nelson’s documentary really does
give a fascinating portrait of Nelson, who even as he became more and more
convinced of various conspiracy theories, remaining outwardly nice and
charming. There were warning signs early in his relationship with Komel sure –
like the fact that David refused to discuss having more kids, despite how young
they both were – but that didn’t mean much. To those who saw them, they seemed
like a perfect young couple, very much in love and happy. She supported the
family, as he followed his dream of making his movie.
And then things just started to
go wrong, and no one quite knows why. Friends and family agree that they first
noticed something at Rainya’s birthday party in August when the couple would
barely acknowledge each other. Komel became increasingly isolated from friends,
families and co-workers – who either couldn’t talk to her at all, or else felt
like something in her changed. All we really have from this period is David’s
bizarre journal, and some videos, where it becomes clear that something strange
is happening with both David and Komel – neither of whom seem in their right
mind.
What happened on Christmas –
which is when David killed his family – will never be known. What flipped that
final switch that made him go off the way he did is something that can never be
known. This documentary makes the compelling case however that it was no
conspiracy – just the sad case of someone who goes off the deep end. One could
argue that Nelson could have explored Crowley’s beliefs – and circle of
influences more deeply (it is a very white group of people and there are some
racist undertones that go unstated), and he certainly should have found a
different way to end the movie (the final moments, about Crowley’s dog are
bizarre) – but overall, A Gray State is a fascinating and sad portrait for our
fake news obsessed times.
This is the most bogus, full-of-shit, biased and uneducated documentary ever. Not for a second do we buy this shit. This documentary aims SOLEY to discredit the "conspiracy" that Crowley made a documentary BLATANTLY pointing fingers at areas of US policy that are NOT spoken about and then suddenly killed his family and himself right as he was about to go full force into production. What a brainwashed, flouridated, ASLEEP, mind-controlled helpless PEON you must be to buy anything from this documentary. Reviewer is brainless to. Big middle finger to you all :) JUSTICE FOR DAVID CROWLEY
ReplyDeleteFully agree with this comment.. this movie reviewer swallowed the bait, and he probably swallows a lot more.
DeleteJustice for David Crowley? Well, in a sense he deserved death for killing his wife and daughter, so I guess justice is kinda served.
ReplyDelete