Festival:
The 16th AFI Docs
Dates:
June 13-17
About:
This Washington DC event showcases approximately 50 documentary features. Continue reading
Festival:
The 16th AFI Docs
Dates:
June 13-17
About:
This Washington DC event showcases approximately 50 documentary features. Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
Coming to theatres tomorrow, Wednesday, June 13:
FIVE SEASONS: THE GARDENS OF PIET OUDOLF
Director:
Thomas Piper
Premiere:
Architecture Film Festival Rotterdam 2017
Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Milano Design, Environmental fests in Washington DC, Philadelphia, Princeton, and Portland
About:
A portrait of the acclaimed garden designer and his work.
I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Landscape designer Piet Oudolf has been called a visionary. He’s known for designing public works like New York City’s popular High Line and Chicago’s Millennium Park that redefine our conception of gardens from mere backdrops to works of art in themselves. Thomas Piper’s film offers viewers an immersion into this modern-day Dutch master’s creative process, as he revisits famed past projects around the world, seeks inspiration in nature, and plans a major new garden in England.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Coming to VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, June 12:
GAMECHANGERS: DREAMS OF BLIZZCON
Director:
John Keating
Premiere:
DreamHack Austin 2018
About:
A look at the lives of two professional StarCraft II players as they prepare for an eSports grand championship.
In South Korea, the popularity of online strategy games like World of Warcraft reached a fever pitch with the release of the games StarCraft and its sequel, spawning a subculture of gaming in Internet cafes and the emergence of eSports. Skilled players like Jang Min-Chul – known as MC – were able to earn enough money playing to become professional gamers. Keating’s film follows MC and younger player Mun Seong Won – better known as MMA – as they contend with the ups and downs of their competitive sport, as well as personal drama behind the scenes, such as impending mandatory military service that threatens to derail a once-promising career. While the film provides basic information to clue in a non-gaming viewer about StarCraft II, the extensive game play shown on screen is virtually incomprehensible at the speed at which these champions play, making for long, repetitive, confusing, and frankly boring stretches of time that detract from the more compelling personal issues that the protagonists face.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
Being re-issued on DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, June 12:
MOTHERLAND
Director:
Ramona Diaz
Premiere:
Sundance 2017
Select Festivals:
Nantucket, Berlin, Docville, San Francisco, Los Angeles Asian Pacific, Montclair, Docaviv, Sheffield, Sydney, Melbourne, Moscow
About:
An immersion into the world’s busiest maternity ward.
My pre-Sundance profile of the doc may be found here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
Coming to NYC’s DCTV Presents series tonight, Monday, June 11:
ALL THAT PASSES BY THROUGH A WINDOW THAT DOESN’T OPEN
Director:
Martin DiCicco
Premiere:
Visions du Réel 2017
Select Festivals:
Hot Docs, Camden, Dokufest, RIDM, Art of the Real, Taiwan Doc, Docaviv, DOK.fest Munich, Thessaloniki Doc, Cinema Verite,
About:
A meditative look at the construction of a Central Asian railway line doubles as a consideration of the impact of a long dispute between neighboring lands.
DiCicco’s artfully constructed, leisurely-paced film is split into three sections: the first and longest one focuses on railway construction workers in Azerbaijan, a makeshift family that toils, eats, and dances together, and bemoans the fact that while well-paid, they haven’t actually received their funds in months. The second and much shorter section brings the viewer to Armenia, and specifically to a long-shuttered train station, a victim of the 1993 Turkish/Armenian border closing that has economically devastated the town. Here, the stationmaster and his small crew keep showing up to work despite the lack of anything to do. Finally, the very short final section takes the perspective of a train passenger, simply watching the landscape go by, as reflected in the project’s evocative title.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations
Director:
Lili Fini Zanuck
Premiere:
Toronto 2017
Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Camden, IDFA
About:
An intimate, revealing musical odyssey on the life and career of the guitar legend, told by those who have known him best.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

photo by Ashly Covington
Director:
Amy Adrion
Premiere:
Sundance 2018
Select Festivals:
SXSW, San Francisco, Sarasota, Newport Beach, Inside Out, Greenwich, Lighthouse, Sydney
About:
A survey of the current state of gender bias in Hollywood filmmaking.
I profiled the doc before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance

photo by Pierre Verdy
Director:
Lorna Tucker
Premiere:
Sundance 2018
Select Festivals:
True/False, CPH:DOX, BAFICI, Docs Against Gravity, Provincetown, Cleveland
About:
A candid profile of the uncompromising British designer.
I profiled the doc before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, June 8:
THE WORKERS CUP
Director:
Adam Sobel
Premiere:
Sundance 2017
Select Festivals:
CPH:DOX, Hot Docs, Sheffield, It’s All True, Docs Against Gravity, Vilnius, Doc Edge, Human Rights Watch, Sydney, Zurich, Carthage, Cinema Verité, Palm Springs
About:
Migrant workers building Qatar’s World Cup infrastructure compete in their own soccer tournament.
I profiled the doc before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
Coming to NYC’s Rooftop Films tomorrow, Friday, June 8:
WRESTLE
Director:
Suzannah Herbert
Co-Director:
Lauren Belfer
Premiere:
San Francisco 2018
About:
An intimate look at a Huntsville AL high school wrestling team.
JO Johnson High School is a struggling institution in a state which already typically has low test scores and graduation rates. Against the odds, social studies teacher Chris Scribner forms a wrestling team that gives its students hope. Herbert and Belfer’s film focuses on four of his team members – Jamario, Teague, Jailen, and Jaquan – whose trials on the mat are nothing compared to what they face in their personal lives, impacted by class and race. As they contend with absent parents and dysfunctional families, substance abuse, teen pregnancy, and racial profiling – on top of the universal struggle of adolescents to assert their independence – these young athletes seek focus and control through Scribner’s team, but they don’t always beat the odds. Though at times feeling like it has one subject too many, with varying levels of engagement and responsiveness from its protagonists, the film ultimately remains compelling in its empathetic and intimate coming of age portrait of four young adults striving to better themselves and their situation.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases