Festival:
The 23rd É Tudo Verdade/It’s All True
Dates:
April 12-22
About:
This documentary event showcases approximately 30 new and recent features to São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro audiences. Continue reading
Festival:
The 23rd É Tudo Verdade/It’s All True
Dates:
April 12-22
About:
This documentary event showcases approximately 30 new and recent features to São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro audiences. Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
Coming to DVD and VOD today, Tuesday, April 10:
MIGHTY GROUND
Director:
Delila Vallot
Premiere:
Los Angeles 2017
Select Festivals:
Big Sky Doc, Napa Valley, Hot Springs Doc, Calgary
About:
A man attempts to use music to battle a lifelong crack addiction and homelessness.
Vallot’s film focuses on Ronald Troy Collins, who spends his days on the streets of LA’s Skid Row asking people for money in exchange for a song – money he’ll use for a simple meal or his next hit of crack, which he’s been using since the age of 13. He gets by with the help of an extended network of people he’s befriended over time, including a store owner and young journalists and musicians who have taken an interest in Collins’ talent. They also play a role in supporting Collins as he tries and fails and tries again to get clean, and eventually channels his energy into developing his music. While Vallot manages to keep the focus rightly in Collins and less on his supporters, thereby avoiding a potential white savior narrative that could easily develop, given that he is African American and they are white, the technically rough film feels overlong, too often including indulgent and unnecessary scenes of Collins just riffing on nothing in particular. Still, it’s a heartfelt and unusually upbeat project that succeeds in putting a honest spotlight on the issue of homelessness.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
Coming to PBS’s America ReFramed tomorrow, Tuesday, April 10:
BEYOND THE WALL
Directors:
Jenny Phillips and Bestor Cram
Premiere:
IFF Boston 2016
Select Festivals:
Woods Hole, Newburyport Doc, Sun Valley, Boston Latino, Prisoners’ Justice, Peace on Earth
About:
A look at the challenges faced by former prisoners after their release.
Phillips and Cram’s film ostensibly focuses on Louie Diaz, a former addict and prisoner who successfully re-entered society after incarceration and now helps others as they attempt to adjust to life outside. He’s an intriguing and charismatic figure, and one whose experiences uniquely positions him to make a difference in the lives of the five men who he counsels and to prevent their recidivism. While earnest and tackling a vital topic, the film would have benefitted from a tighter focus on Diaz and perhaps one or two others with an especially compelling story, like barber Billy, rather than introducing more and more subjects to diminishing interest and attention.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
Coming to PBS’s Independent Lens tonight, Monday, April 9:
THE ART OF THE SHINE
Director:
Stacey Tenenbaum
Premiere:
Hot Docs 2017 (longer version under the title SHINERS)
Select Festivals:
Edmonton, Socially Relevant, Hot Springs Doc, Sarajevo
About:
Shoe shiners around the world talk about their profession.
Tenenbaum’s upbeat film cuts between colorful shiners in far flung places – including New York City, Toronto, La Paz, Tokyo, and Sarajevo – allowing laborers often-ignored by both passers-by and even their own customers to have a voice. While some have actively worked towards making their profession viewed as more upscale, others still reckon with societal stigmas associated with working in the streets. Still, the filmmaker’s overall approach is celebratory, highlighting the positivity, independence, and even creativity that the job affords its practitioners. While well shot, and spotlighting some intriguing subjects, the film suffers from choppy pacing and includes a few shiners too many for its brief running time, with some profiles feeling unnecessarily padded and others underdeveloped.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
Coming to theatres today, Friday, April 6:
GOOD LUCK
Director:
Ben Russell
Premiere:
Locarno 2017
Select Festivals:
Toronto, New York, Rotterdam, Vancouver, CPH:DOX, Mar del Plata
About:
An immersion into the worlds of miners in Serbia and Suriname.
Explicitly structured in two mirrored halves, Russell’s visually striking 16mm-shot project begins and ends with an alchemical symbol of the Earth, a bisected sphere representing above and below. In between, the first half follows Serbian miners as they descend into a government-owned copper mine, while the second explores the illicit operations of an above-ground gold mine in the jungles of Suriname. Russell creates an enveloping, almost hypnotic effect as he plunges viewers within these realms for over two hours, a durational, experiential immersion that allows the audience to bear witness to the conditions of toil and to the camaraderie and commonalities between the workers despite their geographical and cultural separation.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Coming to theatres today, Friday, April 6:
ACORN AND THE FIRESTORM
Directors:
Reuben Atlas and Sam Pollard
Premiere:
Tribeca 2017
Select Festivals:
AFI Docs, Montclair, Traverse City, Indie Memphis, Cucalorus, St Louis, Milwaukee, Napa Valley
About:
An exploration of the manufactured controversy that led to the downfall of a powerful community-based advocacy group.
During the 2008 US Presidential election, John McCain called into question the activities of ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now) and Barack Obama’s connection to the group, suggesting in hyperbolic terms that they were engaged in voter fraud. The next year, Hannah Giles and James O’Keefe, a pair of “concerned citizens” purported to catch ACORN employees on hidden camera abetting their plans involving tax evasion and human trafficking, supposedly while dressed as a stereotypical flashy pimp and prostitute. The media had a field day with their videos, the government raced to defund them, and private funders followed suit, leading to the dissolution of the organization by 2010. Atlas and Pollard’s enraging but not always fully focused film covers this scandal, revealing how quickly and unquestioningly O’Keefe and Giles’ dubious claims were accepted, and the reality of how the pair manipulated editing and flat out lied about the particulars of their sting operation – as well as the forty years of positive, effective change and empowerment that ACORN fostered. Importantly, they link the scandal to the emergence of what would become the alt right, but this is an area that could have received more attention.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases

photo by Gidalya Pictures
Director:
Alexandra Shiva
Premiere:
Sundance 2018
Select Festivals:
Cleveland, Full Frame, Florida, Salem
About:
A look at the experiences of newly arrived Syrian refugees in Baltimore.
I profiled the doc before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, April 6:
THE HEART OF NUBA
Director:
Kenneth Carlson
Premiere:
Hot Springs Doc 2016
Select Festivals:
Human Rights Watch, Hollywood, Shanghai, Golden Apricot, Heartland
About:
A single Western doctor tries to care for the residents of the wartorn Nuba Mountains of Sudan.
Dr Tom Catena practices medicine in the Catholic Mother of Mercy Hospital, located in the middle of a warzone largely ignored by the rest of the world. Despite being condemned for war crimes in 2009, Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir has subjected the people of the Nuba Mountains region in the southern region of the country to regular bombardment. With the area marked as off-limits to outside aid, only Dr Catena remains to treat the victims of what has been called a genocide in progress. Carlson’s thoughtful if overly conventional film profiles Catena, nearing but not quite entering hagiographic white savior territory, as the compelling physician tends to his patients and tries to train the local people to help themselves.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
Festival:
The 21st Full Frame Documentary Film Festival
Dates:
April 5-8
About:
This respected Durham NC nonfiction event showcases more than 50 new documentary features. Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
New to DVD this week:
UNCLE GLORIA: ONE HELLUVA RIDE!
Director:
Robyn Symon
Premiere:
Miami/Ft Lauderdale LGBT 2016
Select Festivals:
DocUtah, Atlanta DocuFest, Southern Comfort, Chagrin Doc, Raindance, Outfest, NewFest, LGBT fests in Palm Springs, Seattle, Rochester, and Fresno
About:
A criminal finds her true gender after crossdressing to escape the law.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases