Category Archives: Documentary

IDFA 2015 Overview, Part Two

idfaYesterday, I highlighted several of the competitive sections at IDFA, which launches its 28th edition tonight, Wednesday, November 18. This supplemental post provides an overview of the impressive fest’s many non-competitive sections, which, in addition to scores of standout titles which have been on the festival circuit this year, includes several less-familiar offerings not yet covered here. The latter are the focus of this overview: Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations

On DVD: MERU

meruComing to DVD today, Tuesday, November 17: MERU

Jimmy Chin and E Chai Vasarhelyi’s look at attempts to scale a daunting mountain debuted at Sundance this year, picking up an audience award. Other fest screenings have included Nantucket, True/False, Full Frame, San Francisco, Telluride Mountainfilm, and Nashville, among others.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance

In Theatres: DEMOCRATS

democratsComing to theatres tomorrow, Wednesday, November 18: DEMOCRATS

Camilla Nielsson’s chronicle of odd-couple politics made its debut at CPH:DOX last year. It went on to screen at Göteborg, Belgrade Docs, Tempo Doc, Tribeca, San Francisco, Doc Aviv, Docs Against Gravity, Sheffield, Melbourne, New Zealand, Zurich, and Hamptons, among other fests.

After decades under Robert Mugabe’s dictatorial rule, Zimbabwe seemed poised for greater freedoms in 2008, when parliamentary elections forced the president to accept plans for a coalition government between his ZANU-PF party and the Movement for Democratic Change opposition party. One consequence was the collaborative drafting of a new constitution, one meant to represent the desires of the people. Nielsson gains exceptional access to this process, tagging along with political rivals Paul Mangwana of ZANU-PF and Douglas Mwonzora of MDC, the two men charged with developing the constitution while engaging in grassroots community listening tours. Mangwana and Mwonzora are well-matched, consummate politicians who recognize that they’re essentially putting on a show, and respond in kind, trying to out do one another and curry favor with the populace whether through well-planned smear campaigns or out-right bribery. The result is a surprising – and sometimes shocking – inside look at the compromises made in the name of politics, one that is also funny, until the viewer recognizes its sad reality for the people of Zimbabwe.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

On DVD: BÉLA FLECK: HOW TO WRITE A BANJO CONCERTO

1201x782-KEY-IMAGE-Earl-_Bela-1160x652Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, November 17: BÉLA FLECK: HOW TO WRITE A BANJO CONCERTO

Béla Fleck and Sascha Paladino’s making of a unique musical work debuted at Nashville last year. It also appeared at DOC NYC, the Denver Film Society, and at Bonnaroo, among other special screenings.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Commissioned to create a first-of-its-kind concerto for the banjo and an 80-piece symphony orchestra, virtuoso musician Béla Fleck faces an intensely personal challenge of collaboration and composition. Named after classical composers, can he live up to the legacy of his namesakes? Directed by Fleck and his brother Sascha Paladino, working together again after their previous doc, THROW DOWN YOUR HEART, this intimate film traces his creative process from first note to the premiere concert performance one year later.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

IDFA 2015 Overview, Part One

idfa Just as America’s largest nonfiction festival, DOC NYC, wraps up, the world’s largest documentary event, Amsterdam’s IDFA, kicks off. The powerhouse fest celebrates its 28th edition between tomorrow, Wednesday, November 18 and Sunday, November 29, showcasing more than 170 new documentary features among scores more retrospective programming, shorts, and new media work. As in the past, IDFA’s massive scope necessitates splitting up this overview into two posts – today’s spotlights the various competitive sections, while tomorrow’s looks at non-competitive strands: Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations

On DVD/VOD: GRINGO TRAILS

gringo_trails_1_dynamic_lead_slideComing to DVD and VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, November 17: GRINGO TRAILS

Pegi Vail’s consideration of the impact of tourism debuted at Margaret Mead last year. Other fest appearances have included Washington DC’s Environmental Film Festival, Sebastopol Doc, Yale Environmental, Göttingen Ethnographic, Documentary Edge, and Galway, among others. It now comes to both DVD and VOD.

I previously wrote about the film here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

On TV: AMERICAN COMANDANTE

american comandanteComing to PBS tomorrow, Tuesday, November 17: AMERICAN COMANDANTE

Adriana Bosch’s tale of an unlikely participant in the Cuban Revolution makes its debut on American Experience tomorrow.

Bosch reveals the unusual – and only recently declassified – story of William Morgan, an American with a decidedly-checkered past who found a second chance to make a name for himself on an island undergoing revolutionary change. Having shamed his upper-class Toledo family several times over as an Army deserter, ex-convict, circus performer, and petty criminal with mob ties, Morgan set out on a path of reinvention at the dawn of the Cuban Revolution, leaving his life in Miami behind to first smuggle in arms to Cuba and later to join the Second Front, a guerrilla group in the Escambray Mountains. After proving himself, the American attained the rank of comandante, married a local Cuban woman, helped grow the rebel forces, and eventually joined forces with Fidel Castro and Che Guevara to end the dictatorial rule of General Batista. Morgan reveled in his new position, attaining further fame in his key role in preventing an insurrection, for which he made powerful enemies and lost his US citizenship. But in his self-mythologizing and idealism, he failed to clue into Castro’s communist leanings until it was too late, ultimately running afoul of the new leader. The content of Morgan’s colorful life makes Bosch’s doc engaging, which otherwise hews close to PBS’s conventional biographical approach.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

On TV: RISING VOICES

RisingVoices-HothaninpiComing to PBS’s WORLD Channel as part of Native American Heritage Month today, Monday, November 16: RISING VOICES/Hótȟaŋiŋpi

Lawrence Hott and Diane Garey’s exploration of the Lakota language has screened at the South Dakota and Red Nation film fests, as well as numerous community screenings in the lead-up to its broadcast debut.

Confronting an issue that is a direct consequence of historical US policies around Native American assimilation, Hott and Garey’s film looks at the impending disappearance of the Lakota language. With fluency in the tongue vanishing as the elder population passes, the Lakota people question what will become of their culture divorced from their tribal language. Will the answer come in the form of immersion schools, or, curiously, from non-Native instructors who have become adepts in the disappearing language? The film offers poignant reflections of the role government-mandated Native American boarding schools had in shaming and punishing the Lakota and other tribes about their heritage and language, erasing the foundation of culture, and details efforts underway to re-embrace the tribal tongue before it dies out.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

On TV: INDIA’S DAUGHTER

urlComing to PBS’s Independent Lens today, Monday, November 16: INDIA’S DAUGHTER

Leslee Udwin’s look at the protests that came in the wake of a notorious rape premiered on the BBC earlier this year. Further broadcast in Europe followed, as well as screenings at Sheffield, Biografilm, AFI Docs, Tallgrass, and Denver, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases

On VOD: DIOR AND I

diorComing to Netflix tomorrow, Saturday, November 14: DIOR AND I

Frédéric Tcheng’s behind-the-scenes look at the legendary fashion design company made its bow at Tribeca in 2014. It has screened at fests in Seattle, Sydney, Provincetown, Outfest, Jerusalem, New Zealand, Rio, Hamptons, Warsaw, Abu Dhabi, CPH:DOX, Tallinn Black Nights, and Madrid Fashion among others. It made its VOD debut earlier this year, but comes to Netflix this weekend.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases