Sundance doc looks at man behind the modern bulletproof vest
Richard Davis was a bankrupt pizzeria owner when he got the idea for a bulletproof vest in 1969 Michigan

Richard Davis was a bankrupt pizzeria owner when he got the idea for a bulletproof vest in 1969 Michigan
Body armor was nothing new, of course, but Davis had an inkling that he could make something lighter that could be worn, undetected, under clothes. Kevlar, heād discover, was the answer. And to prove that his invention actually worked, Davis, a former Marine and born showman, went to some extraordinary lengths: He shot himself over 190 times.
Somehow, thatās not even the wildest part of his story, which is chronicled in the lively documentary ā2nd Chance," which premiered this weekend at the Sundance Film Festival.
Utilizing new interviews with Davis, friends, enemies and ex-wives, the film charts the formation of his company Second Chance, its triumphs (saving hundreds of lives) and tragedies, including the death of a police officer after the company started using Zylon in its vest.
ā2nd Chanceā is the documentary feature debut of Ramin Bahrani, the Iranian-American filmmaker whose films often explore and dismantle notions of the American dream, including āChop Shop and ā99 Homes ā
He was editing his last feature, ā The White Tiger, ā when several producers approached him about making a narrative film about Davis. But Bahrani surprised them when he said heād rather make a doc.
āI tried to go there not knowing and not having a set plan and just waiting for the people to tell me things,ā Bahrani said. āWith the short docs I had made, I remember calling Werner Herzog and asking him whatās the approach? His advice was donāt pre-interview people on the phone, donāt talk to them before you meet them. Just start rolling the camera and get those immediate interactions.ā
Davis is an eccentric character who is at times shockingly candid and other times a wholly unreliable narrator, which Bahrani explores with a clear-eyed empathy.
āSome of what he says can be uncomfortable to hear and I donāt agree with his positions. But at the same time, he was charming, he was friendly. When we showed up every day and we would show up to meet him, he cooked mac and cheese for the crew and fed us cookies,ā Bahrani said.
āWhat was interesting for me in Richard was, you couldnāt pin him down to just wanting to make a lot of money. I kind of agree with his second wife that he wasnāt motivated necessarily by money. But I do think he enjoyed being the star. There is a narcissism to him. There is an ability of believing his own deceptions that did remind me of a lot of people in power even in this country,ā Bahrani continued.
āIt reminds me of some modern or harsh version of Arthur Millerās āAll My Sons,ā where the father has a successful factory making airplanes for the war and the son comes to understand that some of these planes are faulty and resulted in the death of pilots. The father ends up really hitting a moral force from the son and it ends up in a suicide. There's a moral center to the play. Here, somehow that moral center within Richardās own world seemed absent. He started another company that was even more successful, or just as successful. Thereās something disturbing in that.ā
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Follow AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ldbahr