Author Archives: basiltsiokos

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About basiltsiokos

Basil Tsiokos is a Senior Programmer for the Sundance Film Festival, focusing on nonfiction features. He was most recently with DOC NYC for nearly a decade, where he served as Director of Programming since 2014, and with the Nantucket Film Festival as its Film Program Director. Prior to those positions, Basil was the longtime Artistic and Executive Director of NewFest. He has been affiliated with Sundance since 2005 as a Programming Associate. Basil serves on the feature nominating committees for the International Documentary Association Awards and Cinema Eye Honors. He has written about documentaries daily since 2010 on what (not) to doc. Basil holds a Masters degree from New York University and two undergraduate degrees from Stanford University.

On DVD: CITIZEN JANE: BATTLE FOR THE CITY

Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, September 12:
CITIZEN JANE: BATTLE FOR THE CITY

Director:
Matt Tyrnauer

Premiere:
Toronto 2016

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Miami, CPH:DOX, Sarasota, Hong Kong

About:
In the 1960s, writer and activist Jane Jacobs faces off against NYC’s ruthless urban planner, Robert Moses.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: NIGHT SCHOOL

Coming to PBS’s America ReFramed tomorrow, Tuesday, September 12:
NIGHT SCHOOL

Director:
Andrew Cohn

Premiere:
Tribeca 2016

Select Festivals:
Nantucket, Heartland, SXSWedu, St Louis, BendFilm

About:
A profile of three adults seeking to better their lives through education.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV/DVD: ABACUS: SMALL ENOUGH TO JAIL

Coming to PBS’s Frontline and to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, September 12:
ABACUS: SMALL ENOUGH TO JAIL

Director:
Steve James

Premiere:
Toronto 2016

Select Festivals::
New York, Chicago, IDFA, Palm Springs, True/False, Cleveland, Full Frame, Dallas, Hong Kong, Montclair

About:
A small Chinatown bank becomes the only institution to face criminal charges as a result of the 2008 financial crisis.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: MY LOVE, DON’T CROSS THAT RIVER

Coming to PBS’s POV this coming Monday, September 11:
MY LOVE, DON’T CROSS THAT RIVER

Director:
Jin Mo-young

Premiere:
DMZ Docs 2014

Select Festivals:
Hot Docs, Los Angeles, Tempo Doc, Visions du Reel, DocAviv, Sydney, BFI London, RIDM, DOK Leipzig, Moscow, Hamptons, New York Asian American

About:
A tender portrait of an aging couple who have been together for 76 years.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: THE CHALLENGE

Coming to theatres today, Friday, September 8:
THE CHALLENGE

Director:
Yuri Ancarani

Premiere:
Locarno 2016

Select Festivals:
IDFA, Hot Docs, Edinburgh, SXSW, Dubai, New Directors/New Films, True/False, Thessaloniki Doc, Göteborg, Encounters, Taipei, Traverse City, Melbourne, Docs Against Gravity, Docaviv, San Francisco

About:
A privileged look at the lives of ultra-rich Qatari amateur falconers.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: COMPANY TOWN

Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, September 8:
COMPANY TOWN

Directors:
Natalie Kottke-Masocco and Erica Sardarian

Premiere:
Los Angeles 2016

Select Festivals:
Sheffield, Mill Valley, Hot Springs Doc, Wild & Scenic

About:
Residents of a small Arkansas town fight back against the dangers of a nearby industrial plant.

Crossett AR, population 5500, is the site of Georgia-Pacific, one of the largest paper-products manufacturers in the country, and a subsidiary of Koch Industries. While many of Crossett’s residents are dependent on the company for their livelihood, it’s very presence may be costing them their lives. Cancer clusters and serious medical conditions abound, with allegations of toxic chemical dumping blamed, and a cover-up that shields Georgia-Pacific from accountability. The filmmakers delve into this small town public health emergency, profiling a local pastor and former plant employee, David Bouie, who himself suffers from health concerns, as he tries to bring attention to Crossett’s plight, aided by testimony from other afflicted citizens and a former Georgia-Pacific contractor turned whistleblower. Kottke-Masocco and Sardarian lay out the evidence against the company in a clear manner, but in the absence of a clear resolution for Crossett’s situation, their film is less a fully satisfying story and more of a small-scale call to action.

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On TV: TYRUS

Photograph by Irene Poon Andersen.

Coming to PBS’s American Masters tomorrow, Friday, September 8:
TYRUS

Director:
Pamela Tom

Premiere:
Telluride 2015

Select Festivals:
Sheffield, Hawaii, Asian American fests in NYC, San Francisco, San Diego, Los Angeles, Boston, Philadelphia, and Seattle

About:
A portrait of artist Tyrus Wong, best known for inspiring the look of Disney’s BAMBI.

Wong died at the age of 106 last year and only late in life received proper acknowledgement for his contributions to the Disney classic, as well as scores of other films during Hollywood’s Golden Age. Tom’s tribute, while conventionally constructed, benefits greatly from the artist’s participation in extensive interviews, demonstrating warmth and offering personal reflections on his long, varied career as an artist. In addition to developing inspirational artwork for BAMBI and serving as a production illustrator for Warner Bros, Wong’s oeuvre includes Hallmark greeting cards, kite-making, and ceramic design. The supercentenarian relates his background, emigrating from China to California as a child, and how his father supported his at-the-time unusual career path as an artist, as well as the economic difficulties and racial discrimination that kept his work under-appreciated and unheralded for decades.

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In Theatres: TROPHY

Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, September 8:
TROPHY

Directors:
Shaul Schwarz and Christina Clusiau

Premiere:
Sundance 2017

Select Festivals:
SXSW,CPH:DOX, Full Frame, Dallas, Encounters, Jerusalem, Melbourne, Moscow, Sun Valley, Montclair

About:
An exploration of the complex intersections between wildlife conservation and big game hunting.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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Toronto 2017: Documentary Overview

Festival:
The 42nd Toronto International Film Festival

Dates:
September 7-17

About:
The annual North American Fall mecca for the film industry has deliberately slimmed down its lineup, offering just over 250 features vs last year’s near 300, with nonfiction accounting for just under 40 slots, compared to last year’s approximately 60 doc or hybrid presentations. Continue reading

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On DVD: THE APOLOGY

New to DVD this week:
THE APOLOGY

Director:
Tiffany Hsiung

Premiere:
Hot Docs 2016

Select Festivals:
Human Rights Watch, Göteborg, Vilnius, Busan, Cork, Cinemalaya, DocPoint

About:
Former comfort women speak out about the abuse they suffered in WWII.

While the Imperial Japanese Army’s use of sex slaves has already been well-documented as a devastating human rights abuse during wartime, the nation of Japan has yet to officially acknowledge this barbarous practice. With former so-called “comfort women” usually shamed into silence in the decades since World War II, and their aging population dwindling, some have begun to speak out. Hsiung’s impactful film profiles three, hailing from South Korea, China, and the Philippines, to share their harrowing stories, while also following their efforts to receive the titular apology from Japan, only to face further stigmatization and scorn. Hsiung does justice to her subjects’ stories, with the film’s somewhat overlong running time and plodding score the only real missteps, making the project feel even heavier for an already difficult topic.

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