Category Archives: Documentary

2016 DOC NYC in Focus: DOC NYC PRO – Documentary & Journalism Day

overview5DOC NYC PRO, DOC NYC‘s industry programming strand, continues on Tuesday, November 15, with Documentary & Journalism Day: Continue reading

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On TV: ZERO DAYS

zeroComing to Showtime tomorrow, Saturday, November 5: ZERO DAYS

Alex Gibney’s look at cyberwarfare made its bow at Berlin this year. Screenings have followed at Nantucket, AFI Docs, Sydney, Edinburgh, Biografilm, Jerusalem, and New Zealand, among other festivals.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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2016 DOC NYC in Focus: Fight the Power

mother_with_a_gunThis week’s DOC NYC preview comes to a close with our activist doc strand: Fight the Power Continue reading

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In Theatres: THE PRISON IN TWELVE LANDSCAPES

prison_in_twelve_landscapes_5_720_405Coming to theatres today, Friday, November 4: THE PRISON IN TWELVE LANDSCAPES

Brett Story’s meditation on the impact of the prison system across America premiered at True/False this year. Additional screenings included Hot Docs, Art of the Real, Camden, Reykjavik, Ann Arbor, DOXA, and New Orleans, among other events.

The United States leads the world in mass incarceration, making the criminal justice system a sadly perennial topic for documentary filmmakers. Story’s project takes a distinctly different approach in her consideration of the prison-industrial complex – chiefly, she never shows a prison on camera or enters into a cell. Instead, the film offers a series of vignettes demonstrating the less visible signs of our society’s penchant for criminalization and punishment and the consequences for individuals, communities, families, and economies. Stories range from a former prisoner turned park chess player and a man who has developed a cottage industry in supplying prison-approved goods for sale to the family members of the incarcerated, to a former Kentucky coal town now dependent on a prison for jobs and an African American woman who demonstrates racially-motivated policing through her experience of serving two weeks in prison for a minor trashcan violation on her own property. While diffuse in its scope by design, the film effectively builds to a damning indictment of the systemic injustices of policies in dire need of a radical overhaul.

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On TV: A GOAT FOR A VOTE

goatComing to the World Channel’s Doc World series this Sunday, November 6: A GOAT FOR A VOTE

Jeroen van Velzen’s made its world premiere on Dutch television in 2014. Its festival circuit included Traverse City, Sarasota, Camden, Movies That Matter, and One World, among others.

A look at African democracy in a microcosm, van Velzen’s appealing project follows a secondary school presidential election in a small Kenyan village. The three-way race is between Said, a popular rich kid; Harry, a quiet boy from the poor side of the tracks; and Magdalene, who dreams of being the school’s first female president. While Said aims to charm his classmates by composing a catchy rap, Harry hits upon the idea of bribing voters with goat meat, and Magdalene attempts to disrupt the boys’ efforts by creating a unified female student voting bloc to place her in power. As a midlength, the film demonstrates compact observational storytelling – but perhaps a bit too compact, limiting van Velzen’s ability to fully flesh out his protagonists. Still, in a nation where many past federal elections have included charges of fraud and led to violence, this offers an interesting exploration of these young subjects’ perceptions of how political campaigns are meant to operate.

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2016 DOC NYC in Focus: DOC NYC PRO – Pitch Perfect Day

PRO-1110x620DOC NYC gives filmmakers the chance to introduce their upcoming projects to key industry on Monday, November 14, when DOC NYC PRO presents Pitch Perfect Day. Continue reading

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2016 DOC NYC in Focus: Jock Docs

cheer_upWrapping up today’s preview of DOC NYC programming: Jock Docs, our focus on sports. Continue reading

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In Theatres & On VOD: PETER AND THE FARM

peterComing to theatres and to VOD tomorrow, Friday, November 4: PETER AND THE FARM

Tony Stone’s portrait of an isolated farmer debuted at True/False at the beginning of the year. It went on to screen at New Directors/New Films, San Francisco, Melbourne, Camden, and Poland’s American fest, among other events.

Peter Dunning has worked his Mile Hill Farm for 35 years, and it has taken its toil. He came to Vermont as part of the back to the land movement, and for a time, Mile Hill was an idyllic place, drawing his friends and family together. Now 68 years old, Peter is alone, estranged from his grown children, his marriage having ended long ago, a victim of his depression and alcoholism. Somehow, he still maintains a wry humor, and a penchant for storytelling, preventing this artfully composed profile from feeling either exploitative or unrelentingly dark, leaving an indelible impression of the man and his work.

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On DVD: FREE TO RUN

free-to-run_592x299New to DVD this week: FREE TO RUN

Pierre Morath’s chronicle of the development of the sport of running made its theatrical premiere in Switzerland this February. It went on to screen at BAFICI, Docs Against Gravity, Sydney, and New Zealand fest, among others festivals.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: ALL GOVERNMENTS LIE: TRUTH, DECEPTION, AND THE SPIRIT OF I F STONE

allgovernmentslie_01Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, November 4: ALL GOVERNMENTS LIE: TRUTH, DECEPTION, AND THE SPIRIT OF I F STONE

Fred Peabody’s look at the courageous work of independent journalists made its world premiere at Toronto in September. It has also screened at Washington DC’s Double Exposure Investigative fest prior to its theatrical opening.

Though little known to the general public, journalist I F Stone worked tirelessly to expose political corruption, single-handedly publishing a small newsletter between 1953-1971 – decidedly outside of the mainstream media. Peabody’s film highlights his present-day heirs, investigative journalists continuing his legacy in their own pioneering work, regardless of the professional and personal risks. Tackling the erosion of personal freedom that has taken place since 9/11, as well as the corporatization of media, the likes of Amy Goodman, Glenn Greenwald, Jeremy Scahill, Laura Poitras, Carlos Frey, and Matt Taibbi are profiled as they try to go behind the surface and expose what’s really going on in the world. By its nature, the film takes more of a survey approach rather than an in-depth look at the reporters’ individual stories, but it clearly conveys the importance – and necessity – of their missions.

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