New to VOD: CAN WE TAKE A JOKE?
Ted Balaker’s exploration of outrage, censorship, and stand up debuted at DOC NYC last year. Screenings have followed at Anthem, RiverRun, and Sarasota, among other events.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
New to VOD: CAN WE TAKE A JOKE?
Ted Balaker’s exploration of outrage, censorship, and stand up debuted at DOC NYC last year. Screenings have followed at Anthem, RiverRun, and Sarasota, among other events.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Coming to PBS tonight, Wednesday, August 3: KOKO: THE GORILLA WHO TALKS
Jonathan Taylor’s look at the famed sign-language-using ape debuted on the UK’s BBC earlier this Summer. It now comes to American public television.
While Koko’s story has been the subject of other documentary programs over the past forty years, including Barbet Schoeder’s KOKO: A TALKING GORILLA, Taylor’s production benefits from the hindsight of time, chronicling the scope of Project Koko, which began in 1972 and continues to this day. While his crew gives a sense of Koko’s life now, they are also given access to extensive archival footage, much of it shot by Ron Cohn, co-founder of the Gorilla Foundation, who has been in Koko’s life since his colleague, Penny Patterson, began her study of animal communication while a graduate student at Stanford University. The film is as much about Patterson as it is her simian surrogate daughter, to whom she taught more than 1000 words using sign language, and who she believes has demonstrated the ability to communicate complex and abstract thoughts. While others who have studied animal communication have questioned her claims, Patterson has persevered, devoting her entire personal and professional life to Koko, even while her field has moved away from the study of interspecies communication. Limited by a too-short hourlong running time, Taylor’s film is unfortunately unable to approach this intriguing controversy in much depth before moving on to consider the difficulty Patterson has had in fulfilling Koko’s apparent desires to be a mother herself.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
New to DVD: REQUIEM FOR THE AMERICAN DREAM
Peter Hutchison, Kelly Nyks, and Jared P Scott’s look at Noam Chomsky’s views on inequality debuted at Tribeca last year. Additional screenings have included IDFA, AFI Docs, Vancouver, Antenna, Adelaide, and DocPoint, among other events.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Coming to PBS’s American Experience tonight, Tuesday, August 2: THE BOYS OF ’36
Margaret Grossi’s chronicle of the US rowing team that upset Hitler’s plans for Olympic gold makes its debut on the long-running public television strand. Special promotional screenings have been held in Seattle, Chicago, and Los Angles over the past month.
Timed to correspond with the upcoming Summer Olympics, and inspired by the New York Times bestselling THE BOYS IN THE BOAT by Daniel James Brown, Grossi tells the tale of the nine young men from the University of Washington’s rowing team who participated in the contentious 1936 Games, hosted by Nazi Germany, and their coach and shell builder who led them to victory. While the sport was widely popular across America at the time, this Pacific Northwest team differed from their East Coast counterparts, coming largely from poor and working-class backgrounds. Individual biographies, like that of Joe Rantz, reveal particularly poignant histories of poverty, abandonment, and resilience, in many ways serving as a microcosmic representation of a nation still contending with the Great Depression. While hewing close to the PBS strand’s conventional storytelling format, the film zeroes in on the U of W’s underdog story, revealing how the team beat the odds – even with stroker Don Hume nearly incapacitated by sickness – to claim the gold medal over Hitler’s Aryan athletes.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Tomorrow, Wednesday, August 3 sees the opening of the 69th annual Locarno Film Festival, which this year will offer nearly 100 new and recent features over the course of its run, which ends on Sunday, August 13. About a third of these are nonfiction or hybrid projects, with some highlights noted below: Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
Coming to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, August 2: LITTLE WHITE LIE
Lacey Schwartz’s personal uncovering of family secrets debuted at the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival in 2014. Screenings followed at DOC NYC, New Orleans, Sidewalk, Black Harvest, BlackStar, Martha’s Vineyard African American, and Philadelphia Jewish fests, among other events.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Coming to PBS’s Independent Lens tomorrow, Tuesday, August 2: T-REX: HER FIGHT FOR GOLD
Drea Cooper and Zackary Canepari’s profile of a female boxer’s Olympic dreams premiered at SXSW last year. Its festival circuit also included Hot Docs, New Orleans, San Francisco, Traverse City, Camden, Hot Springs Doc, DOK Leipzig, Cucalorus, Athena, and Atlantic, among others.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Coming to PBS’s POV tonight, Monday, August 1: IRIS
Al Maysles’ profile of a NYC style icon debuted at the New York Film Festival in 2014. The doc went on to screen at the Hamptons, San Francisco, Tallinn Black Nights, Palm Springs, Miami, Ashland, Full Frame, Sarasota, and Belfast fests.
I previously wrote about the doc upon its theatrical release here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Coming to NYC’s Rooftop Films tomorrow, Saturday, July 30: IN PURSUIT OF SILENCE
Patrick Shen’s meditation on the place of silence within modern life debuted at CPH:DOX last year. Festival berths followed at SXSW, Atlanta, Cleveland, Ashland, Full Frame, Dallas, Docville, DOXA, Sheffield, and San Francisco Green, among others.
Traversing the globe, Shen’s film identifies some of the most quiet places on Earth, going so far as to note their average decibel levels. These stand in stark contrast to the rest of the world, where an increasingly cacophonous soundscape threatens concentration, sanity, and even physical health, as revealed by a select group of interview subjects, experts on silence and noise, including George Prochnik, whose eponymously-titled book inspired this project. The quiet spaces are captured in artfully composed shots, with equally striking aural qualities serving as an immediate reminder of just what we’re missing behind all the manmade discord. Shen prompts audiences to pause and appreciate the importance of silence, as a space for contemplation in contrast to our increasing drive to keep ourselves distracted and occupied – demonstrated concisely in an appreciation for John Cage’s once-derided silent classic, 4’33”.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations
Coming to VOD today, Friday, July 29: HOLY HELL
Will Allen’s look back at a life spent in a cult had its world premiere at Sundance this year. It went on to screen at Hot Docs, Nashville, Montclair, Minneapolis-St Paul, DocAviv, Martha’s Vineyard, and Biografilm, among other events.
My pre-Sundance profile of the doc may be found here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance