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.

Special Screening: ORIENTED

orientedComing to NYC’s Brooklyn Museum this Saturday, June 4: ORIENTED

Jake Witzenfeld’s look at the lives of gay Palestinians made its bow at Sheffield last year. It went on to screen at Los Angeles, Cleveland, Nashville, QDoc, Seattle Jewish, Other Israel, Chicago Palestine, Seret London, and Workers Unite, among other fests. The film screens for free as part of the museum’s First Saturdays series.

The three main subjects of Witzenfeld’s observational portrait are friends who live in Tel Aviv: Activist Khader, a Palestinian Israeli citizen who is in a relationship with a Jewish Israeli; Fadi, who questions whether he has the right to call himself a Palestinian, and vows to never date an Israeli – but then falls for a Zionist soldier; and Naeem, who struggles to come out to his family back in their village home. Collectively – and working with others who receive far less screentime here – as Qambuta, they create would-be viral videos exploring queer Palestinian identity. While the video shoots provide Witzenfeld with some creative visuals, this thread feels the least developed – aside from one brief scene where the three men read snarky comments their first video receives, there seems to be no impact at all from this work either on their lives or those of other Palestinian queers. Far more successful are scenes like the opening, which finds Khader relating a story to a group of Jews at a Tel Aviv LGBT center about the West’s misconceptions of sad, persecuted gay Palestinians living in the shadows – his family is wonderfully supportive, as evidenced by a later episode which finds them providing emotional support to Naeem, who fears his own father’s disapproval. While this intimate film makes no pretense of representing the whole of Palestinian gay life, given its deliberately constrained focus on three men, it does offer a refreshing consideration of the intersection of the various identities – sexual, national, and political – that play out within the complex background of the Middle East, even for this cohort’s relatively free and largely secular lives.

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Encounters 2016 Overview

encountersTaking place in Johannesburg and Cape Town between today, Thursday, June 2 and next Sunday, June 12, South Africa’s Encounters is the continent’s largest nonfiction event. The 18th edition of the festival includes more than three dozen nonfiction features, with nearly half of that number representing African productions, including the highlights below: Continue reading

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On DVD: IMBA MEANS SING

imbaNew to DVD this week: IMBA MEANS SING

Danielle Bernstein’s portrait of a Ugandan children’s choir debuted at Atlanta last year. Other fest screenings have included Nashville, San Diego Kids, DocuWest, Hot Springs Doc, Citizen Jane, Lone Star, and the Southern Circuit, in addition to community and church screenings.

The African Children’s Choir, founded in 1984 during a period of civil war in Uganda, has afforded children living in extreme poverty an avenue to express themselves and provide for their future. International tours, album releases, and media appearances have resulted in greater visibility for the group, which expanded from a strictly Ugandan choir to take on children from other African nations. Bernstein focuses her film on Choir 39 as it tours around the world to generate awareness – and ultimately funds – for the faith-based parent organization’s efforts to provide education and relief for poverty-stricken children. In an audience-friendly decision that might come off as too saccharine for some viewers, the point-of-view is that of three of the choir members – primarily standout drummer Moses, with support from quieter Nina and the more outgoing Angel. They’re all cute, and, importantly, hopeful, kids, but their centrality in the storytelling allows the film to sidestep larger, more complex questions around poverty, international aid, and the role of children in, essentially, singing for their supper. Still, their voices do offer a corrective for the kind of reductive, stereotypical representations of “poor African kids” that often dominate mainstream media.

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In Theatres: PAUL SHARITS

Paul_Sharits_05-1024x576Coming to NYC’s Anthology Film Archives tomorrow, Thursday, June 2 through Saturday, June 4: PAUL SHARITS

François Miron’s appreciation of the avant-garde filmmaker made its bow at Rotterdam last year. Since then, it has screened at Jeonju, Japan’s Image Forum, San Francisco Doc Fest, Jerusalem, Montreal’s Festival du Nouveau Cinéma, Viennale, Manchester, and Rendezvous With Madness, among other events.

A widely-respected pioneer of structuralist film, Paul Sharits made experimental work from the mid-1960s until his strange death in 1993. A visual artist who became fascinated by 16mm film and the flicker effect of projection, he produced touchstone films like T,O,U,C,H,I,NG, (1969) and later further deconstructed conventional film to create innovative new forms of expression that presaged gallery and museum installation work. Miron, a filmmaker and scholar, incorporates interviews, archival footage, and samples of Sharits’ work to give the artist his due here. While likely best appreciated by those already familiar with the innovator’s body of work, Miron’s film provides ample background and context, including a consideration of the impact of Sharits’ bipolar disorder, to provide a primer for the uninitiated that may very well spur them on to seek out more of his influential films.

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On VOD: THE STATE OF MARRIAGE

the_state_of_marriage_still_h_15Coming to VOD today, Tuesday, May 31: THE STATE OF MARRIAGE

Jeff Kaufman’s chronicle of the legal origins of marriage equality made its debut at Provincetown last year. Other screenings have included Brattleboro, Santa Fe, GlobeDocs, and the Austin LGBT fests.

While same-sex marriage legalization became part of the national debate over the past few election cycles, the battle for this civil right has been waged over long decades. Kaufman’s film recognizes the importance of the precedent set in Vermont as a pivotal part of the story, and focuses on the significant efforts made by a trio of female attorneys to bring marriage quality to that state. Galvanized by a child custody case in the early 1990s involving the surviving lesbian partner of a woman who was killed in a car accident, small-town Vermont lawyers Susan Murray and Beth Robinson sought out support for protections for other same-sex couples. After they found a partner in Mary Bonauto, a Boston-based civil rights advocate, they laid the groundwork to argue for the constitutionality of same-sex marriage, adopting a strategy that humanized the issue and found parallels in the once-banned practice of interracial marriage. Even after they found partial victories – legalized civil unions rather than full marriage – they continued their struggle, causing rifts between those who felt they were overreaching and others who were willing to accept the compromise. While the larger story is by now well-known, and Kaufman’s approach ultimately fairly conventional, the film succeeds in presenting a detailed look at the hard-fought grassroots campaign that enabled the freedoms that are enjoyed today.

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Los Angeles 2016: Documentary Overview

laffThe 22nd Los Angeles Film Festival, beginning a week earlier than last year, launches tomorrow, Wednesday, June 1. More than 70 features will screen at the event before it wraps up on Thursday, June 9, including 17 documentaries, a number of which are highlighted below: Continue reading

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On VOD: THE CASE OF THE THREE SIDED DREAM

Rahsaan1-710x450Coming to VOD today, Tuesday, May 31: THE CASE OF THE THREE SIDED DREAM

Adam Kahan’s portrait of an experimental jazz multi-instrumentalist made its bow at SXSW in 2014. Additional play included New Orleans, IDFA, Big Sky, Full Frame, Salem, ReelAbilities, Atlanta’s Pan African, LA’s Don’t Knock the Rock, Florida, Leeds, and jazz fests in New York and Burlington.

I previously wrote about the film here.

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Special Screening & In Theatres: THE WITNESS

witnessComing to NYC’s Stranger Than Fiction tomorrow, Tuesday, May 31 and to theatres this Friday, June 3: THE WITNESS

James Solomon’s revisitation of an infamous NYC murder made its debut at the New York Film Festival last Fall. Screenings followed at Palm Springs, Big Sky, Boulder, Hong Kong, Sarasota, and Atlanta, among other events.

The 1964 rape and murder of Kitty Genovese in Queens shocked New York City and the rest of the nation, not just for the horrific crimes perpetrated against the young woman, but because of reports that 38 eyewitnesses were aware of the attack taking place yet did nothing – either assuming someone else would call the authorities, or unwilling to become involved in a stranger’s plight. The case pointed out the dangers of urban apathy and spawned neighborhood watch groups to try to prevent future crimes. On a personal level, the inaction of the 38 witnesses inspired Genovese’s younger brother, Bill, to enlist in the military so he could make a difference in the world, resulting in the loss of both of his legs in combat in Vietnam. Four decades later, however, The New York Times, the same paper that reported the indifference of Genovese’s neighbors, discredited its original report. This rewriting of the legend provides the impetus for Bill to make sense of what happened to Kitty, what witnesses did or didn’t do, and the crime’s impact on his own life. Solomon crafts an engaging, sensitive exploration of myth and reality, in the process revealing a fuller sense of a woman until now known only as a victim.

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On VOD: ABOVE AND BELOW

ABOVEANDBELOW-KEYComing to VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, May 31: ABOVE AND BELOW

Nicolas Steiner’s portrait of the lives of outsiders debuted at Rotterdam last year. Its fest circuit also included DOC NYC, Hot Docs, BAFICI, Docs Against Gravity, Edinburgh, Karlovy Vary, Vancouver, CPH:DOX, DocPoint, Big Sky, and Cucalorus, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: THE LAST SEASON

Last_Season_01_webComing to PBS’s America ReFramed today, Monday, May 30: THE LAST SEASON

Sara Dosa’s portrait of a mushroom foraging clan debuted at San Francisco in 2014. Screenings followed at New Orleans, Hot Docs, Mountainfilm Telluride, Rooftop Films, Big Sky, Sebastopol Doc, United Nations Association, and the Seattle Asian American fest, among others. The film makes its television premiere in recognition of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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