Category Archives: Documentary

Human Rights Watch 2016: Documentary Overview

hrwTonight, Friday, June 10 sees the opening of the 27th New York City edition of the Human Rights Watch Film Festival, which uses the power of storytelling to expose and bear witness to human rights issues both internationally and domestically. The event is primarily a nonfiction showcase, with a smaller number of vetted, fact-based fiction features and special panels also included. This year’s lineup offers seventeen documentary features which will screen through Sunday, June 19, including the following highlights:

Almost Sunrise signatureSeveral films explore human rights in the United States, such as Michael Collins’ ALMOST SUNRISE (pictured), which follows two veterans as the cross the country by foot as a way to combat the after-effects of war. Other treks are explored in films about crises and migration, including George Kurian’s THE CROSSING, about the flight of Syrian refugees to Europe.

TEMPESTAD_1Among the projects addressing issues of accountability and justice are Tatiana Huezo’s consideration of victims of corruption in Mexico, TEMPESTAD (pictured); and Michele Mitchell and Nick Louvel’s look at the struggle to have rape acknowledged as a war crime, THE UNCONDEMNED.

growingupcoy2-1600x900-c-defaultWomen’s rights are the subject of a number of offerings, including Maisie Crow’s JACKSON, which looks at the battle being waged against abortion clinics in the South; while films focusing on LGBT rights include Eric Juhola’s GROWING UP COY, about a six-year-old transgender girl whose barring from using her school’s girls’ bathroom leads to a civil rights case.

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On TV: OJ: MADE IN AMERICA

ojComing to ABC beginning tomorrow, Saturday, June 11 for its first episode, then to ESPN for an encore broadcast and the remainder of the series this coming Tuesday, June 14 through Saturday, June 18: OJ: MADE IN AMERICA

Ezra Edelman’s in-depth look at the infamous celebrity athlete-turned-murder suspect made its debut at Sundance earlier this year. It also screened at Hot Docs, Tribeca, and the Freep Film Festival.

I profiled the series before Sundance here.

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In Theatres: GERMANS & JEWS

germans and jewsComing to theatres tomorrow, Friday, June 10: GERMANS & JEWS

Tal Recanati and Janina Quint’s consideration of the complex relationship between the two titular groups makes its debut today at the Greenwich film fest before opening in NYC’s Cinema Village.

Taking on a thought-provoking topic, Recanati (American, Jewish) and Quint (German, non-Jewish) host a dinner party for Jewish Germans, non-Jewish Germans, and non-German Jews living in Germany to reflect on the two people’s shared history and their ongoing modern reconciliation as the population of Jews in Germany continues to rise. Taking as a point of contrast the ways that the East and West approached the legacy of the Nazi era, the film offers viewers a concise history of how, when, and why a reckoning with the past came, and the impact this had on their respective populaces. Moving beyond the topic of Vergangenheitsbewältigung, other conversations explore more explicitly present-day concerns, including fears of the growth of anti-Semitism as the nation’s Muslim population grows, and the challenges of being de facto perceived as anti-Semitic if one criticizes Israel. While the topic lends itself to these and other engaging ideas, the conventional filmmaking approach taken, with an excess of talking heads, makes it more appropriate for the small screen than theatrical venues.

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Sheffield Doc/Fest 2016 Overview

sheffieldSheffield Doc/Fest‘s 23rd edition begins tomorrow, Friday, June 10. The popular six-day event draws filmmakers and industry to South Yorkshire for a lineup featuring over 100 new and recent feature docs, plus retrospective work, shorts, and industry programming. In addition to presenting the UK bows of some of the standout titles that have debuted elsewhere over the past year, the event also showcases notable new titles, such as the highlights noted below: Continue reading

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Special Screening: BOUNCE: HOW THE BALL TAUGHT THE WORLD TO PLAY

bounceComing to NYC’s Bronx Documentary Center as part of their Sports Film Series tonight, Wednesday, June 8: BOUNCE: HOW THE BALL TAUGHT THE WORLD TO PLAY

Jerome Thélia’s meditation on play debuted at SXSW last year. Other screenings included DOC NYC, IFF Boston, Telluride Mountainfilm, Portland, DocUtah, Napa Valley, St Louis, and Bergen, among other events.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
In this wide-ranging and buoyant essay film, Jerome Thélia explores the universal appeal of play as realized in the ubiquity and versatility of the ball. Observing its popularity across time, language, nation and even species, the film’s intriguing multidisciplinary survey of historians, evolutionary biologists, psychologists, and sports commentators reveals the ball’s simple, yet profound impact on behavior, from its enabling of socialization to its role in encouraging problem solving and creativity.

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In Theatres: ‘TIL MADNESS DO US PART

til madnessComing to NYC’s Anthology Film Archives for a one-week run beginning tomorrow, Thursday, June 9: ‘TIL MADNESS DO US PART

Wang Bing’s immersion into a mental institution had its world premiere at Venice in 2013. Other fest berths included Toronto, Vancouver, Viennale, Busan, Docslisboa, Rio, Edinburgh, Hong Kong, Rotterdam, CPH:DOX, Sydney, and Poland’s New Horizons.

I previously included the film in my Toronto coverage here.

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Sydney 2016: Documentary Overview

2016-sffflogo001fThe Sydney Film Festival begins today, Wednesday, June 8, and runs through Sunday, June 19. Approximately 150 features will unspool during the event, which holds its 63rd edition this year. The following highlights a selection of the nearly 60 new and recent nonfiction features appearing in the festival: Continue reading

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On DVD: FANTASTIC LIES

fantastic liesComing to DVD today, Tuesday, June 7: FANTASTIC LIES

Marina Zenovich’s look back at the infamous 2006 Duke lacrosse sexual assault case made its debut at SXSW this Spring. The ESPN 30 for 30 doc was then broadcast on the 10th anniversary of the team’s party that resulted in the scandal.

Zenovich lays out the particulars of the case as they were initially understood: During a house party held by Duke University’s champion lacrosse team, there was an argument being the white players and the African American strippers they hired for entertainment. Racial slurs were levied against the women, and, according to some reports, threats of sexual violence. Hours later, one of the dancers reported to the police that she was sexually assaulted by three of the team members while at the party. Against a backdrop of tension between the affluent, Northern, white Duke University community and its working-class, Southern, black local neighbors, the accusation set off a firestorm. Fanned by the media, public outrage denounced the culture of privilege and supposed impunity among the lacrosse players and demanded swift action from university officials against the athletes, before any charges were brought against them. When the district attorney finally did name three players party to the crime, Zenovich shifts gears, and, with the cooperation of the parents of the accused, as well as others involved with the case, demonstrates how they were exonerated, and that, eventually, the accuser recanted, at least at the time. More recently, she has affirmed that she was assaulted that night, but due to an unrelated case that finds her imprisoned and unable to appear on camera here, the filmmaker instead paints a not entirely convincing picture of mental instability through third person reports. Regardless, what Zenovich’s cautionary film does demonstrate successfully is the prosecutorial misconduct that led to the DA being disbarred, and, more importantly, the dangers inherent in the presumption of guilt in the court of public opinion.

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On DVD/VOD: YALOM’S CURE

marilyn_irvinyalomComing to DVD and VOD today, Tuesday, June 7: YALOM’S CURE

Sabine Gisiger’s portrait of a psychiatrist had its premiere at Locarno in 2014. The doc also screened at Mill Valley, Docs Against Gravity, São Paulo, and Jewish fests in San Francisco, Boston, and Vienna, among other fests.

Gisiger’s subject is Dr Irvin Yalom – apparently America’s most popular psychotherapist, according to the film, though it’s not entirely clear how that’s judged – it’s likely a general audience would have little idea who he is. Unfortunately, the film assumes that Yalom needs very little introduction, making this feel very much like it’s pitched to the already converted. Despite the film’s tagline – “a guide to happiness” – while Yalom emphasizes that he lives a life free of regrets, the film offers viewers little insight as to how and why. For those not already familiar with his body of work, the film offers a thoughtful but unfortunately not particularly engaging reflection on the existentialist psychotherapist’s views on life, death, marriage, and family, as well as his professional breakthroughs in using writing and group therapy to help his patients.

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On VOD: LENNY COOKE

lenny-cooke-basketball-documentaryComing to VOD today, Tuesday, June 7: LENNY COOKE

Joshua and Benny Safdie’s look at a would-be pro athlete debuted at Tribeca in 2013. Screenings followed at Venice, Poland’s American Film Festival, Vienna, and Geneva, among other fests. It now comes to VOD platforms including iTunes, Google Play, Amazon, Vudu, Microsoft, Vubiquity, and Vimeo.

I included the film in my Tribeca coverage here.

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