TAKE EVERY WAVE: THE LIFE OF LAIRD HAMILTON
Rory Kennedy profiles the iconoclastic athlete who revolutionized big wave surfing.
Festival Section:
Documentary Premieres
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TAKE EVERY WAVE: THE LIFE OF LAIRD HAMILTON
Rory Kennedy profiles the iconoclastic athlete who revolutionized big wave surfing.
Festival Section:
Documentary Premieres
Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
The 10th anniversary Cinema Eye Honors, recognizing achievements in non-fiction film from 2016, were celebrated at the Museum of the Moving Image at a ceremony last evening. Earlier this week, the organization announced its Legacy Award winner, Rob Epstein’s THE TIMES OF HARVEY MILK; as well as Michal Marczak’s hybrid ALL THESE SLEEPLESS NIGHTS as the winner of the Heterodox Award, which annually goes to a fiction film that incorporates nonfiction strategies.
Below is the full list of winners announced at last night’s ceremony, which was hosted for the second year in a row by acclaimed documentarian and part-time comedian Steve James. I was happy to once again serve on the Nominations Committee. Congratulations to all the winners, nominees, and the Cinema Eye organizers!
Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Feature Filmmaking
CAMERAPERSON
Audience Choice Prize
GLEASON
Outstanding Achievement in Direction
Ezra Edelman for OJ: MADE IN AMERICA
Outstanding Achievement in Editing
Nels Bangerter for CAMERAPERSON
Outstanding Achievement in Production
Ezra Edelman and Caroline Waterlow for OJ: MADE IN AMERICA
Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography
Kirsten Johnson for CAMERAPERSON
Outstanding Acheivement in Nonfiction Films Made for Television
MAKING A MURDERER
Outstanding Achievement in a Debut Feature Film
HOOLIGAN SPARROW
Outstanding Achievement in an Original Music Score
David Byrne, LeeAnn Rossi, and Aaron Rosenblum for CONTEMPORARY COLOR
Outstanding Achievement in Graphic Design or Animation
Craig Staggs and Keith Maitland for TOWER
Spotlight Award
LES SAUTEURS (THOSE WHO JUMP)
Outstanding Achievement in Nonfiction Short Filmmaking
LA LAGUNA
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations
New to DVD/VOD this week:
YARN
Director:
Una Lorenzen
Co-Directors:
Heather Millard and Thordur Jonsson
Premiere:
Göteborg 2016
Select Festivals:
SXSW, Newport Beach, Iceland’s Skjaldborg Doc fest
About:
Survey of artists working in yarn.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
RANCHER, FARMER, FISHERMAN
Directors Susan Froemke and John Hoffman and co-director Beth Aala profile unlikely conservation leaders.
Festival Section:
Documentary Premieres
Special Program:
The New Climate
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Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
The 25th annual New York Jewish Film Festival opens tonight, Wednesday, January 11, and runs through Tuesday, January 24. The event, co-presented by Film Society of Lincoln Center and The Jewish Museum, has a smaller lineup than in the past, presenting just over 20 new and retrospective features, including 11 new works of nonfiction.
Among these offerings are the world premieres of SHALOM RABIN (pictured), Amos Gitai’s essay film of the months prior to the controversial Israeli leader’s assassination; and ANGEL WAGENSTEIN: ART IS A WEAPON, Andrea Simon’s portrait of the Cannes award-winning Bulgarian Jewish director and author.
US premieres include Gabrielle Zilkha’s DOING JEWISH: A STORY FROM GHANA (pictured), which follows the filmmaker as she connects with African Jews; and Giovanni Troilo’s WILLIAM KENTRIDGE: TRIUMPHS AND LAMENTS, a behind-the-scenes look at the Jewish South African artist as he undertakes a massive project in Rome.
Finally, New York City premieres appearing at the fest are Danae Elon’s THE PATRIARCH’S ROOM (pictured), about Jerusalem’s Greek Orthodox Church leader, living under house arrest; and Oren Rosenfeld’s HUMMUS! THE MOVIE, which profiles three diverse Israelis and the food that connects them.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
OKLAHOMA CITY
Barak Goodman revisits the events which led to the 1995 terrorist bombing of the Oklahoma City Federal Building.
Festival Section:
Documentary Premieres
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Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
Coming to NYC’s Film Forum today, Wednesday, January 11: EVERYBODY KNOWS… ELIZABETH MURRAY
Director:
Kristi Zea
Premiere:
Tribeca 2016
Select Festivals:
Berkshire, FilmColumbia, Vermont, Santa Fe
About:
An appreciation of the late American artist.
Known for her unusually shaped, fractured, and often humorous canvases, Murray was one of a few women artists to enjoy the same level of success afforded to her male contemporaries. Working in NYC since she moved from Chicago in the late 1960s, Murray became part of the burgeoning bohemian art scene, even as she balanced the demands of motherhood, and produced art through her death in 2007. Zea’s hourlong project serves as brief but effective primer to introduce audiences who may not be familiar with Murray’s work – even given the inclusion of her pieces in the permanent collections of major institutions like the Whitney, Guggenheim, and MoMA – while also offering an opportunity for reflection from the artist’s contemporaries and admirers, from longtime gallerist Paula Cooper to Roberta Smith and Chuck Close, particularly on the struggles to combat sexism within the art world.
Film Forum’s run of the hourlong portrait is accompanied by Alison Klayman’s half-hour doc short on 101-year-old artist Carmen Herrera, THE 100 YEARS SHOW.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
LONG STRANGE TRIP
Amir Bar-Lev offers a history of the legendary counterculture band the Grateful Dead.
Festival Section:
Documentary Premieres
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Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
LEGION OF BROTHERS
Greg Barker hears from Green Berets about their secret missions to overthrow the Taliban after 9/11.
Festival Section:
Documentary Premieres
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Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
Coming to VOD today, Tuesday, January 10:
THE WEEKEND SAILOR
Directors:
Bernardo Arsuaga
Premiere:
Bilbao’s SAIL in Festival 2016
Select Festivals:
Seattle, DocsMx, SF Ocean, Newport Beach, Guanajuato, Waimea Ocean Film Festival
About:
The story of a Mexican yacht that was the underdog in a round the world race in the 1970s.
Arsuaga focuses on Ramon Carlín and the crew of his Sayula II as the Mexican team competes in the first competitive sailing race around the world, organized by the UK in 1973. Known today as the Volvo Ocean Race, the Whitbread Round the World Yacht Race pitted several British yachts against other European entries helmed by professional yachtsmen. Into this mix came underdog supreme Carlín, a weekend sailor with no extensive sailing experience and no idea how to organize a crew for this kind of endeavor. He was made a laughingstock in the media but, as appealingly recounted here, ended up pulling off an upset victory after initially being thought lost at sea, and became national heroes for Mexico as a result. Gathering virtually the entire, familial crew, the film ends up drowning in anecdotes and excessive voice of God, television-style narration delivered by Simon Le Bon. More impressively used is the extensive footage shot on the ship during the circumnavigation, as well as during their time ashore between each leg, which provides a welcome sense of immersion for the viewer, in moments… until Le Bon’s voice unfortunately dispels it.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases