Festival:
The 35th Outfest
Dates:
July 6-16
About:
One of the world’s premier LGBT film festivals, the LA event screens over 60 new and recent features, including more than 20 documentaries. Continue reading
Festival:
The 35th Outfest
Dates:
July 6-16
About:
One of the world’s premier LGBT film festivals, the LA event screens over 60 new and recent features, including more than 20 documentaries. Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
Coming to VOD today, Tuesday, July 4:
SAVE MY SEOUL
Director:
Jason Y Lee
Premiere:
LA Asian Pacific 2017
Select Festivals:
Asian American fests in New York and Silicon Valley
About:
Korean-American filmmaking brothers investigate the illegal but condoned culture of prostitution in Korea.
While visiting Korea, brothers Jason and Eddie naively begin an undercover investigation, using hidden cameras and sound recording equipment while they visit the red light district. Interviews with police about how brothels are able to operate yield only evasive answers, but when the Lees convince former working girls Crystal and Esther to speak on camera, they learn details about their negative experiences, later bolstered by access to a working pimp who defends his profession. Supplementing these compelling figures are frequent and superfluous vox pops with ordinary Korean citizens, which drag out the proceedings for what is a well-intentioned but often clumsy project that would have benefited from the overzealous filmmakers not including themselves on camera.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
Coming to theatres this Friday, July 7:
CITY OF GHOSTS
Director:
Matt Heineman
Premiere:
Sundance 2017
Select Festivals:
Nantucket, Tribeca, CPH:DOX, San Francisco, Hot Docs, Jeonju, Sheffield, AFI Docs, Jerusalam, Seattle, Montclair, Traverse City
About:
A courageous group of citizen journalists risk their lives to expose the truth behind ISIS.
I profiled the doc before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
Coming to VOD via Netflix tomorrow, Tuesday, July 4:
VEGAS BABY
Director:
Amanda Micheli
Premiere:
Tribeca 2016
Select Festivals:
San Francisco, AFI Docs, IFF Boston, Cleveland, Miami
About:
People struggling with infertility participate in a contest held by a fertility clinic.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Releases
Coming to PBS’s POV tonight, Monday, July 3:
THE WAR SHOW
Directors:
Obaidah Zytoon and Andreas Dalsgaard
Premiere:
Venice 2016
Select Festivals:
Toronto, IDFA, Bergen, Reykjavik, London, Dubai, Goteborg
About:
A group of friends capture the de-evolution of Syria’s revolution into civil war.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Coming to Rooftop Films tomorrow, Saturday, July 1:
QUEST
Director:
Jonathan Olshefski
Premiere:
Sundance 2017
Select Festivals:
Nantucket, True/False, New Directors/New Films, Cleveland, RiverRun, Nashville, Ashland, Hot Docs, Dallas, DOXA,
About:
A longitudinal portrait of an African-American family in North Philly.
I profiled the doc before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
Coming to theatres today, Friday, June 30:
THE B-SIDE: ELSA DORFMAN’S PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY
Director:
Errol Morris
Premiere:
Telluride 2016
Select Festivals:
Toronto, New York, Chicago, IDFA, Hong Kong, Provincetown, Moscow, IFF Boston,
About:
A large-scale Polaroid photographer reflects on her work on the eve of her retirement.
Laying aside his Interrotron for the moment, master documentarian Morris goes for a warmer, more personal interaction with his latest subject, visiting Elsa Dorfman in her Cambridge MA photography studio which doubles as a cramped archive. The photographer discovered her medium in the early 1980s when she encountered a 20×24 Polaroid camera, and has been taking large-print portraits ever since. Morris’ film’s title derives from her practice of shooting two portraits with the same client, keeping the rejected one – the “b-side” – for herself. As a result of Polaroid’s bankruptcy and its discontinuation of 20×24 instant film, Dorfman faces impending retirement, prompting a sometimes wistful look back at her career and the strikingly optimistic work she has produced. What emerges is a subtle contemplation of time, mortality, and legacy.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Coming to theatres today, Friday, June 30:
MALI BLUES
Director:
Lutz Gregor
Premiere:
Visions du Reel 2016
Select Festivals:
Toronto, IDFA, Munich, Dubai, Indielisboa, Santa Barbara, Minneapolis St Paul, Warsaw, Stockholm
About:
A world music star returns to her homeland of Mali to perform for the first time in defiance of radical Islamic law.
Like many performers, singer Fatoumata Diawara has been unable to pursue her passion in Mali in recent years because of the spread of sharia law and its ban on secular music and dance. When the situation improves, Diawara and several other musicians return to perform in large concert, the Festival of Niger. Lutz follows them as they prepare, filling in their back stories and exploring their connection to an Islam that is not repressive or violent. Diawara eclipses the other protagonists here, suggesting that Lutz might have been better off focusing his attention on either just her or fewer subjects. While well-produced, the film tends toward full-on concert film territory rather than expanding on the situation facing musicians in Mali – a subject which was also already explored in the earlier THEY WILL HAVE TO KILL US FIRST.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases

Coming to theatres this Friday, June 30, and to VOD next Tuesday, July 4:
THE REAGAN SHOW
Directors:
Pacho Velez and Sierra Pettengill
Premiere:
Tribeca 2017
Select Festivals:
Nantucket, Montclair, Seattle, AFI Docs
About:
In 1918, Hollywood actor Ronald Reagan took on the role of a lifetime: the 40th President of the United States.
I previously wrote about the doc for Nantucket’s program, saying:
Trading on his celebrity to curry favor with voters, Ronald Reagan transitioned from Hollywood actor to politician, ultimately attaining the highest office in the land. Composed entirely of 1980s news footage and behind-the-scenes videos produced by his own administration, this insightful, entertaining, and strangely prescient film details how Reagan used public relations savvy to become the first made-for-TV president – one uniquely suited to face off against a charismatic Russian rival.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
New to DVD this week:
LAST DAYS OF SOLITARY
Director:
Dan Edge
Premiere:
Salem 2017
About:
An inside look at a high security prison’s reforms to reduce the number of inmates in solitary confinement.
Set in Maine State Prison, this PBS Frontline film explores a forward thinking program instituted by its warden to focus on rehabilitation rather than punishment, responding to the deleterious impact of solitary confinement on mental health, shown from years of study but largely ignored by the prison industry. Edge showcases the prison segregation unit, where prisoners spend 23 hours in their cells and often resort to self-harm to try to exercise some level of control on the corrections officers, smuggling razor blades and cutting themselves to force a cell extraction; or otherwise causing disruption such as flooding their cells by stopping up toilets. Followed over three years, the prison’s new reforms see counseling being substituted for additional persecution, with the goal of bringing prisoners out of solitary and eventually back into the general population. Several prisoners are profiled, including one violent participant in the program who’s subsequent murder of another inmate forces the warden to leave his post. Surprisingly, the next prison commissioner does not abandon the reforms but accelerates them, ultimately finding success, reducing the number of prisoners in solitary to a fraction of what they were, and seeing recidivism stats decline. Edge’s doc is an engaging look at a topic that’s been well covered before, but one that notably has an unusually hopeful message.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases