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: MITT

mittComing to DVD today, Tuesday, September 20: MITT

Greg Whiteley’s candid portrait of the Presidential hopeful had its world premiere at Sundance in 2014. It also screened at Traverse City and Sun Valley following its Netflix debut directly after Sundance wrapped.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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On TV: EAST OF SALINAS

east-of-salinas-jose-field2-1024x683Coming to PBS’s Independent Lens for an encore screening on the World Channel tomorrow, Tuesday, September 20: EAST OF SALINAS

Laura Pacheco and Jackie Mow’s look at the life of a child of migrant farmworkers debuted on Independent Lens late last year. The film went on to screen at IFF Boston, and at Latino fests in San Diego and Boston.

Pacheco and Mow’s film focuses on eight-year-old José Anzaldo, who was brought from his native Mexico to Salinas, an agricultural center in northern California, where they are farmworkers. José’s potential has been noted by his third grade teacher, Oscar Ramos, because the latter shares a similar background. Oscar was able to change his future through education, and hopes for the same for his young student, but he knows the harsh reality facing José and others like him, as they face fears of deportation, unstable living situations, and the lack of documentation to allow them to obtain higher education. While José’s is just one of two million stories, as noted in the film’s ending, and can’t hope to capture the complexity of the undocumented issue, it certainly helps to humanize those caught up in its debate.

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On TV/DVD: DEFYING THE NAZIS: THE SHARPS’ WAR

ken-burns-defying-the-nazis-1Coming to PBS and to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, September 20: DEFYING THE NAZIS: THE SHARPS’ WAR

Ken Burns and Artemis Joukowsky’s tale of a mission to save refugees and dissidents from the Nazis premiered in theatres earlier this month. It now makes its broadcast and home video debut.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD: UNDER THE SUN

under the sunComing to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, September 20: UNDER THE SUN

Vitaly Mansky’s revealing look at North Korea had its premiere at DOK.Leipzig last year. It went on to screen at Nantucket, IDFA, Hot Docs, Tallinn Black Nights, Jihlava, DocPoint, SXSW, DOXA, San Francisco, and Seattle, among others.

I previously wrote about the film here.

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On TV: KINGDOM OF SHADOWS

KINGDOMOFSHADOWS-KEYComing to PBS’s POV tonight, Monday, September 19: KINGDOM OF SHADOWS

Bernardo Ruiz’s look at the consequences of the war on drugs on the border of Mexico and the US made its world premiere at SXSW last year. Screenings followed at DOC NYC, Full Frame, Ambulante, San Francisco Latino, Ambulante California, Sedona, and IDFA.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: THREE DAYS OF TERROR: THE CHARLIE HEBDO ATTACKS

three-days-of-terror-the-charlie-hebdo-attacks-1024-670x446Coming to HBO tonight, Monday, September 19: THREE DAYS OF TERROR: THE CHARLIE HEBDO ATTACKS

Dan Reed’s in-the-moment retelling of the January 2015 Paris terrorist actions debuted on the BBC on the anniversary of the attacks. It now makes its debut as part of HBO’s long-running Monday night doc programming.

On January 7, 2015, Saïd and Chérif Kouachi stormed through the building housing the offices of Charlie Hebdo, a French satirical magazine that had published cartoons controversially depicting the prophet Muhammad, to avenge the perceived slight to Islam. These French-born Yemeni Al-Qaeda members murdered eleven people, injured another eleven, and then killed a police officer as they made their temporary escape. Within two days, they were killed by police after a hostage situation. Elsewhere in the city, a former prison friend of the brothers, another French-born man, Amedy Coulibaly, shot a policewoman before himself taking hostages at a kosher supermarket, killing four of them before police stopped him. Reed powerfully relates these harrowing incidents through eye-witness testimony and chilling cameraphone footage, drawing viewers into the experiences as they took place, with disturbing clarity.

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On TV: THE KILLING FIELDS OF DR HAING S NGOR

KillingFieldsComing to PBS’s Doc World this Sunday, September 18: THE KILLING FIELDS OF DR HAING S NGOR

Arthur Dong’s profile of a noted Cambodian activist made its debut at San Francisco’s CAAMFest last year. Screenings followed at Seattle, Denver, Salem, Hawaii, Morelia, and Asian/Asian American fests in Austin, Boston, New York, and Los Angeles.

Based largely on Ngor’s autobiography, Dong’s film tells the story of a respected gynecologist, who, like so many other Cambodians, fell victim to the brutal Khmer Rouge regime. While he survived, his wife did not, leaving lasting scars. He drew on his experiences for an unexpected acting role in THE KILLING FIELDS, for which he won an Academy Award, and used his newfound celebrity to spread awareness of the Cambodian genocide and the ongoing subjugation of his people by Vietnamese invaders. Tragically, he lost his life not in the killing fields, but in a Los Angeles alleyway, the victim of an apparent robbery – though some still maintain that he was assassinated for his activism. Dong draws from Ngor’s book, combining narration from his nephew with unfortunately hokey re-enacted scenes from his life, set against occasional animated sequences and archival footage. While the results are uneven, the film serves as a heartfelt reminder of the direct consequences of Pol Pot’s genocidal reign and its lingering aftermath.

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In Theatres: A FAMILY AFFAIR

familyaffair_-_h_2015Coming to theatres today, Friday, September 16: A FAMILY AFFAIR

Tom Fassaert’s investigation into family estrangement made its debut at IDFA last year, where it won a special jury award. Screenings have followed at Thessaloniki Doc, It’s All True, Documentary Edge, DOK.fest Munich, Taiwan Doc, Ambulante, Encounters, Sheffield, Biografilm, Docs Against Gravity, AFI Docs, Moscow, and the upcoming Zurich and Doclisboa fests, among others.

When Fassaert’s father Rob was three, his mother Marianne abruptly left Rob and his older brother Rene at an orphanage. Two years later, and just as inexplicably, she returned to reclaim them, never explaining what happened. To say that their relationship became strained would be an understatement. Marianne eventually emigrated to South Africa, leaving her children behind. Rene never recovered, while Rob considered himself an orphan. After Rob started his own family, Marianne reconnected, coaxing Rob and his own family to relocate to South Africa with the promise of a job, only to renege once they arrived. While his father has since cut off contact, the now-95-year-old Marianne reaches out to invite the filmmaker to visit her, setting this fascinating, oblique family history into motion. Enraptured by being filmed, she indulges in selective, revisionist history which casts her as the victim. When pressed, she refuses to addresses difficult topics – until she reveals, in a truly disturbing sequence, that she is in love with her grandson and is convinced he reciprocates. Even as she takes a final return trip to the Netherlands to see her family for the last time, she never proves less than an intriguing enigma – underlined by the unexplained title of the memoir she’s engaged a ghostwriter to work on: MY DOUBLE LIFE.

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In Theatres & On VOD: DANCER

dancerComing to theatres and to VOD today, Friday, September 16: DANCER

Steven Cantor’s portrait of ballet’s bad boy made its theatrical debut in LA last week. It will also screen at the upcoming Zurich, BFI London, and Calgary film fests.

Showing immense potential, Ukrainian Sergei Polunin was transitioned from gymnastics to ballet at an early age. When faced with high tuition for his dance training, his father and grandmother moved abroad to earn money. Their sacrifice paid off, as Polunin earned a spot in London’s Royal Ballet School at the age of 13. Six years later, he was named its youngest ever principal dancer, with critics proclaiming him the next Nureyev. Confronted with fame and success while still a teenager, the dancer lived a life of excess, earning him a wild reputation, and, just a few years later, burn out. Gaining intimate access to Polunin, his family, friends, and dance world associates, Cantor offers a behind-the-scenes look at the trajectory of the dancer’s meteoric rise and fall, the hidden costs of success, and how the viral response to his performance in Hozier’s “Take Me To Church” helped reignite his passion for the art form.

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In Theatres: SOUTHWEST OF SALEM: THE STORY OF THE SAN ANTONIO FOUR

salemComing to theatres tomorrow, Friday, September 16: SOUTHWEST OF SALEM: THE STORY OF THE SAN ANTONIO FOUR

Deborah S Esquenazi’s look at a case of wrongful conviction debuted at Tribeca earlier this year. The doc also screened at Hot Docs, Sheffield, DocuWest, AFI Docs, Frameline, Outfest, and Inside Out.

As signaled by its somewhat too-reminiscent title, Esquenazi’s film looks at the tragic fallout of 1990s Satanic panic that also claimed the West Memphis Three, as documented in Joe Berlinger’s PARADISE LOST trilogy and Amy Berg’s WEST OF MEMPHIS. In this particular instance, the supposed perpetrators, known by their supporters as the San Antonio Four, faced a quadruple whammy while facing the justice system – not only where they accused of Satanism, but they were women, Latina, and lesbians. Looking back, the accusations against them are so ludicrous it would be laughable, except that these charges put four innocent women behind bars for decades. Lesbian couple Anna and Liz, along with two friends, were accused of gang raping Liz’s two young nieces while babysitting. While there is no physical evidence, and the nieces’ father clearly had it out for Liz, prosecutors trumpeted up outlandish theories and considered the defendants’ sexuality as de facto guilt. After languishing in prison for years, their story eventually comes to the attention of the Innocence Project of Texas, which eventually leads to a more clear-eyed re-examination of the case. Esquenazi’s film is largely compelling, if fairly conventionally constructed, and while it eschews the sensationalism that dogged the women in their trials, it displays a strange lack of urgency that undercuts the women’s desire for a full exoneration. Still, the injustice done to the sympathetic San Antonio Four is clearly conveyed.

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