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.

In Theatres: BIRTHRIGHT: A WAR STORY


Coming to theatres today, Friday, July 14:
BIRTHRIGHT: A WAR STORY

Director:
Civia Tamarkin

Premiere:
theatrical (July 2017)

About:
A wide-ranging look at the impact on women of restrictive abortion laws, religious hospital mergers, and fetal personhood laws.

Tamarkin’s film offers an expansive historical and contemporary look at how women’s rights have been trampled by anti-abortion forces, who have moved beyond simply picketing clinics to infiltrating legislatures and passing increasingly restrictive laws, shifting somewhat from overturning Roe vs Wade to simply bypassing it. Beyond the TRAP laws that films like TRAPPED and JACKSON have already effectively documented, this project also focuses on the history and consequences of the personhood movement – attempts to assign rights to embryos, often at the cost of maternal health, safety, or choice. The influence of anti-abortion forces on sex education, the availability of contraception, and the access of poor women to health care, are also covered, while another thread includes the conversion of secular medical institutions to Catholic hospitals, subject to religious beliefs rather than medical facts, with women not being offered tubal ligation, contraceptive advice, or any assistance when it involves fetal termination. While clearly taking a pro-choice stance, the film notably includes voices from both sides of the abortion debate, and shares often very affecting personal stories. Unfortunately, in addition to casting its net just a bit too wide, the film is also marred by subpar, uncinematic production values that favor a parade of talking heads and manipulative music, making this more geared to small screens.

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In Theatres: THE WRONG LIGHT

Coming to theatres today, Friday, July 14:
THE WRONG LIGHT

Directors:
Josie Swantek Heitz and Dave Adams

Premiere:
Cleveland 2016

Select Festivals:
Montclair, Atlanta, Milwaukee, United Nations Association, Heartland

About:
A profile of a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping sex trafficking victims takes a disturbing turn.

Heitz and Adams began their project as a way to draw attention to the horrific epidemic of child sex trafficking. Learning about the heroic efforts of war photographer-turned-activist Mickey Choothesa to free young girls from sexual slavery in Thailand, the pair set out to profile the work of his organization, COSA (Children’s Organization of Southeast Asia), which serves as a refuge for the girls he saves, offering them food, shelter, education, and love, as one of its residents notes here. The filmmaking duo learned from Choothesa that many of the girls were sold into sexual slavery by their own impoverished families, but that COSA did not believe in punitive measures, even allowing the girls to visit their home villages regularly. But when Heitz and Adams began to interview the girls and their families, they began to uncover inconsistencies, ultimately discovering that much – if not all – of the background Choothesa provided about his charges was fabricated. As the filmmakers try to track down the truth, their film shifts into an investigation into fraud and even more troubling abuse, with not only COSA’s future at stake, but that of the young girls as well. While Heitz serves as an awkward narrator here, her on-camera appearance – together with other members of the crew – is somewhat justifiable given the nature of the story that emerges – one that asks provocative questions about the sometimes dubious motivations behind activism and philanthropy.

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On VOD: FINDING OSCAR

Coming to VOD today, Friday, July 14:
FINDING OSCAR

Director:
Ryan Suffern

Premiere:
Telluride 2016

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Boulder, Mill Valley, Sedona, Sun Valley, United Nations Association, Austin

About:
Investigators seek justice for the victims of a state-sponsored Guatemalan massacre.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On VOD: GOOD FORTUNE

Coming to VOD today, Friday, July 14:
GOOD FORTUNE

Directors:
Joshua Tickell and Rebecca Harrell Tickell

Premiere:
Zurich 2016

Select Festivals:
Austin, Sedona

About:
A biography of John Paul DeJoria, a self-made billionaire and pioneer of conscious capitalism.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: ALMOST SUNRISE

Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, July 14:
ALMOST SUNRISE

Director:
Michael Collins

Premiere:
Telluride Mountainfilm 2016

Select Festivals:
Human Rights Watch NYC, AFI Docs, Wisconsin, Waimea Ocean Film Festival, SF Docfest, GI Film Festival

About:
Two suffering veterans cross the country by foot in an attempt to combat the persistent after-effects of war.

Like many veterans, Tom and Anthony returned from several tours of duty as changed men. Suffering from hyper-vigilance, depression, suicidal ideation, and with relationships with loved ones strained, they seem like textbook PTSD cases. But when conventional treatments and self-administered band-aids – prescription drugs and alcohol – yielding little relief, the friends set out on a 2700 mile walking trek across the country to draw attention to the plight of veterans like them. While this element of Collins’ film offers viewers the opportunity to consider the alarming suicide rates among vets, and to meet fellow soldiers and families touched by combat along the pair’s journey, their odyssey itself doesn’t seem to yield much insight. Instead, their exploration of the concept of “moral injury” – distinct from PTSD as it directly addresses the guilt experienced by soldiers for violating entrenched moral codes against killing – seems the real key to their healing. Unfortunately, because the therapy sessions that go to the heart of this reckoning were not allowed to be filmed, their impact is somewhat lessened here. Regardless, both men surprisingly emerge from their pilgrimage and therapy transformed, able to communicate better with their loved ones, and seemingly more at peace than they’d been for several years, making for an uplifting, hopeful film that may very well help others.

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In Theatres & On VOD: CHASING CORAL

Coming to theatres and to VOD via Netflix tomorrow, Friday, July 14:
CHASING CORAL

Director:
Jeff Orlowski

Premiere:
Sundance 2017

Select Festivals:
SXSW, Hot Docs, Sundance London, San Francisco, Boulder, Seattle, Sydney

About:
A race to chronicle the climate change-driven destruction of coral reefs around the world.

I previously profiled the doc before Sundance

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Jerusalem 2017: Documentary Overview

Festival:
The 34th Jerusalem Film Festival

Dates:
July 13-23

About:
Approximately 100 new and recent features screen at the Israeli event, with a third representing nonfiction work. Continue reading

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On DVD: HEARING IS BELIEVING

New to DVD this week:
HEARING IS BELIEVING

Director:
Lorenzo DeStefano

Premiere:
Hawaii 2016

About:
A portrait of Rachel Flowers, a blind musical prodigy.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On VOD: BARBECUE

New to VOD this week:
BARBECUE

Director:
Matthew Salleh

Premiere:
SXSW 2017

Select Festivals:
Sydney

About:
Barbecue traditions around the world.

Salleh’s film profiles several locations and local customs around grilling meat on fire, including South Africa, Japan, Australia, Mongolia, Sweden, the Philippines, Uruguay, Armenia, Syria/Jordan refugee camps, Texas, Mexico, and New Zealand. Almost uniformly, participants note the importance of community, coming together, sharing stories as they share food, while also revealing some detail about their specific traditions, from Texan dry rub slow indirect cooked brisket to Swedes’ love of prepackaged picnic ready disposable personal grills. While well-shot, this hopelessly overscored project also is far too long and repetitive, having made its point about the commonality and sociability of the practice within its first few scenes, only to repeat them again and again at each new picturesque location.

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In Theatres: I AM THE BLUES

Coming to theatres today, Wednesday, July 12:
I AM THE BLUES

Director:
Daniel Cross

Premiere:
IDFA 2016

Select Festivals:
SXSW, Hot Docs, Pan African, Raindance, Salem, Docs Against Gravity, IndieBo

About:
An ethnomusicological tour of the American South.

As signaled by his film’s title, Canadian filmmaker Cross explores the enduring legacy of the blues, not by offering a comprehensive history of the distinctly American genre, but instead by focusing on the aging musicians who are still performing, and, in so doing, keeping their artform alive. Traveling throughout Louisiana and Mississippi, the filmmaker profiles several old-school African-American musicians, many in their 80s, who grew up with the blues by playing the Chitlin’ Circuit, usually barely eking out a living. While Cross offers audiences a showcase of their talents in several demonstrations of their performances – too many in a film nearing two hours – the project’s survey structure and a surfeit of subjects results in a lack of deep exploration or any strong story-driven thread. Still, music fans will likely find much to enjoy in this loving tribute.

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