Category Archives: Documentary

2016 Sundance Docs in Focus: OJ: MADE IN AMERICA

ojAnd wrapping up Special Events features (remaining nonfiction projects are short form): Ezra Edelman’s OJ: MADE IN AMERICA, an ESPN 30 FOR 30 miniseries about the football star-turned-murder suspect.

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Special Events
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On DVD: I AM THOR

thorComing to DVD today, Tuesday, January 19: I AM THOR

Ryan Wise’s profile of an aspiring rock god had its premiere at Slamdance last year. It went on to screen at Florida, Brooklyn, San Francisco Doc, Fantasia, New Zealand, and Calgary Underground.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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2016 Sundance Docs in Focus: CHELSEA DOES

chelsea doesNext up in Special Events: Eddie Schmidt’s CHELSEA DOES, a preview of the new Chelsea Handler-led Netflix docuseries.

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On DVD: ALL THINGS MUST PASS

allthingsmustpassComing to DVD today, Tuesday, January 19: ALL THINGS MUST PASS

Colin Hanks’ tribute to Tower Records made its bow at SXSW last year. It went on to screen at Seattle, AFI Docs, Sacramento, and Greenwich, among other fests.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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2016 Sundance Docs in Focus: AMERICAN EPIC

american epicMy Sundance doc profiles move on to this year’s Special Events, one-off presentations of upcoming episodic and other unique programming: Bernard MacMahon’s AMERICAN EPIC, a preview of a multi-part PBS docuseries and feature doc exploring the roots of American music.

Festival Section:
Special Events
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On VOD: THERE WILL BE NO STAY

there will be no stayComing to VOD today, Tuesday, January 19: THERE WILL BE NO STAY

Patty Dillon’s consideration of the death penalty’s impact on the executioners premiered at Big Sky last year. Other fest screenings have included Cinequest, Omaha, and Hot Springs. FilmBuff now releases the film across VOD platforms.

Dillon’s film focuses on two primary subjects, Terry Bracey and Craig Baxley, former South Carolina correctional officers who were both traumatized by their time as executioners, with deleterious consequences on both their personal and professional lives. Having felt improperly trained to handle the impact of taking other human lives over and over again, Terry and Bax sued the state for damages, but lost. Supplementing their story are profiles of three others with experience with the correctional system’s death penalty process: former warden Dr Allen Ault, who ultimately had to walk away from his position because he couldn’t reconcile the death penalty with his beliefs; Reverend Caroll Pickett, the Huntsville TX death house chaplain-turned-anti-death penalty activist who was previously the subject of Steve James and Peter Gilbert’s affecting AT THE DEATH HOUSE DOOR; and, least successfully, Bill Pelke, the grandson of a murder victim who eventually tried to reach out to one of his grandmother’s murderers, changing his own stance on capital punishment in the process. Where Dillon succeeds is in exposing the wider impact that state-sanctioned executions have, beyond simply on the perpetrator. Where she stumbles is in her overblown, largely unnecessary narration, and in the lack of focus brought on by expanding beyond Terry and Bax’s stories.

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On TV: SALAM NEIGHBOR

salamComing to Pivot TV as part of its Stand Up For Justice programming series tonight, Monday, January 18: SALAM NEIGHBOR

Zach Ingrasci and Chris Temple’s attempt to call attention to the Syrian refugee crisis made its world premiere at AFI Docs last Summer. It also screened at Poland’s Watch Docs, CPH:DOX, and Aruba, among other events.

Responding to the plight of Syrian refugees in Jordan, the young filmmakers set out to share the situation with Western audiences. Unfortunately, the approach they decide to take is to make a film about themselves trying to share the plight of the refugees, rather than actually allowing Syrians to share their plight. Gaining permission from the UN, they register as refugees at the Za’atari displacement camp in order to live among actual displaced Syrians for a month and replicate their experiences. After one night, however, they’re told it’s too dangerous for two Americans to live there, and they must instead stay in a nearby town. Continuing with their project in a less immersive form, they fleetingly profile a handful of residents, but still keep themselves at its center, and in the process convey their experiences and feelings of being at Za’atari more than those of the Syrians who were forced there. While no doubt well-meaning, Ingrasci and Temple’s filmmaking approach unfortunately smacks of unconscious, unexamined privilege, and loses sight of its ostensible goals.

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2016 Sundance Docs in Focus: NOTES ON BLINDNESS

notes on blindnessMy New Frontier roundup ends with the third of three nonfiction/hybrid titles: Peter Middleton and James Spinney’s NOTES ON BLINDNESS, which re-embodies a man’s experiences of losing his sight.

Festival Section:
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On TV: BONNIE & CLYDE

bonnie and clydeComing to PBS’s American Experience tomorrow, Tuesday, January 19: BONNIE & CLYDE

John Maggio’s tale of the notorious outlaw couple makes its debut on the long-running public television strand.

During a crime spree that ran between 1931-1934, Bonnie Parker, Clyde Barrow, and their Barrow Gang captured the attention of the country with wild true crime stories of armed robberies making headline after headline. As recounted in Maggio’s biographical film, the pair emerged in the midst of the Great Depression, a time of desperation that saw the public embrace them as romantic anti-heroes and revel in their ability to defy the law, despite being behind the murders of several police officers and robbery victims. The gangsters’ inadvertent role in propagating this outsider image, however, ultimately proved their undoing, as the film reveals. They might have successfully continued to carry on their illicit activities were it not for the emergence of a series of photos the gang took in 1933 – playfully staged shots of themselves showing off their guns and acting out imagery familiar from true crime pulp magazines – that were discovered in their abandoned hideout. Once released to the press, these proto-selfies became a pre-digital viral sensation, made them instantly recognizable, and started the countdown to their inevitable, bloody showdown with the authorities made famous for more modern audiences through Arthur Penn’s Faye Dunaway/Warren Beatty classic. Maggio, sticking close to the American Experience formula, blends talking heads representing distant family members and historians with some intriguing archival footage to tell a conventional, but still compelling, story of the enduring appeal and fascination with the criminal couple.

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2016 Sundance Docs in Focus: THE ILLINOIS PARABLES

illinois parablesToday’s second New Frontier title: Deborah Stratman’s THE ILLINOIS PARABLES, an experimental meditation on belief, doubt, science, and religion.

Festival Section:
New Frontier
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