






A graffiti genius who chose jail over millions—until Facebook made him filthy rich anyway.
Los Angeles artist David Choe's kaleidoscopic work can be playful, confrontational and sexually frank. His personal life is no less complicated, as revealed by close friend Harry Kim, who documented Choe's life and crimes from 2000 to 2007. From the manic highs of commercial success and dinosaur hunting in the Congo to the self-destructive lows of Japanese jail sentences and bouts of self-doubt and depression, what begins as a gleeful portrait of a bad-boy artist slowly becomes a poignant celebration of one man's journey, both artistically and spiritually, toward his own uncertain salvation. Written by Travis Miles
Direction
Harry Kim's decade-long friendship grants impossible intimacy.
Production
Raw vérité footage from actual Congo dinosaur hunts and Japanese prison.
Writing
Narrative arc that redefines the artist documentary template entirely.
Director
Harry Kim
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes