The Life and Crimes of Doris Payne (FILM REVIEW)
The Life and Crimes of Doris Payne
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Dubious Documentary Celebrates Checkered Career of
African-American Jewel Thief
Doris Payne was born black back in
1930 in Slab Fork, West Virginia
where she was raised during the Jim Crow era of racial segregation. Besides
having to withstand withering bigotry and racial discrimination as a child, she
grew up in a dysfunctional family where her father routinely beat her mother right
in front of her face.
That might help explain her turning
to crime at an early age, starting with stealing a diamond from a department
store, fencing it, and using the funds to help her mom escape the abusive
marriage. Unfortunately, Doris didn’t stop
there, but took to jewel thievery like a fish to water, gradually escalating to
seven figure takes by targeting upscale retailers like
Cartier and Tiffany.
Her modus operandi involved gaining the confidence of a gullible
store clerk before resorting to distracting devices such as sleight of hand and
dizzying hand jive. That reprehensible behavior kept the sticky-fingered felon
forever on the run from authorities as she netted millions in gems over the
course of a checkered career spanning six decades and counting.
Specializing in identity theft, Doris was an expert at
impersonating wealthy socialites in exotic locales, as she did on Monaco
where she passed herself off as the wife of movie director Otto Preminger. Overall,
she‘s employed at least 20 aliases, 11 Social Security numbers and 9 passports
in pursuit of ill-gotten gems. Brief stints in prison couldn’t cure Doris’
compulsive kleptomania, which is why she’s presently doing time behind bars for
purloining a precious stone worth 22Gs just last year.
Co-directed
by Matthew Pond and Kirk Marcolina, The Life and Crimes
of Doris Payne is a documentary of dubious intentions which futilely endeavors
to paint an empathetic picture of an unrepentant octogenarian who simply fails
to earn the audience’s respect. After all, her odious line of work has serious
consequences not only for herself but for others, as was the case with a
tearful clerk seen here who was fired for being fleeced by the wily old recidivist.
Doris Payne, an unappealing,
un-role model who stole millions from the rich and simply frittered it away on
herself in decadent fashion.
Very Good
(2.5 stars)
Unrated
Running time: 74 minutes
Distributor: Film
Forum
To see a trailer for
The Life and Crimes of Doris Payne,
visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yhnlcEhKZ-k
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