Category Archives: Documentary

On DVD: BITE SIZE

bite sizeComing to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, March 24: BITE SIZE

Corbin Billings’ exploration of childhood obesity premiered at Cinequest last year. The film will also screen at the upcoming TIFF Kids fest. It was released on Vimeo earlier this month and now expands to additional VOD platforms, including iTunes, Google Play, Amazon Instant Video, and VUDU, in addition to its DVD release.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD: ACTRESS

actressComing to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, March 24: ACTRESS

Robert Greene’s portrait of a woman looking for her comeback had its world premiere at True/False last year. It went on to screen at Nantucket, Hot Docs, AFI Docs, Art of the Real, DMZ Docs, Camden, CPH:DOX, RIDM, and IDFA, among several others.

I previously wrote about the doc upon its theatrical release here.

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On TV: THE LEGEND OF PANCHO BARNES AND THE HAPPY BOTTOM RIDING CLUB

panchoComing to The WORLD Channel’s Strength of Women series today, Friday, March 20: THE LEGEND OF PANCHO BARNES AND THE HAPPY BOTTOM RIDING CLUB

Amanda Pope’s biography of a colorful aviation pioneer debuted at NewFest in 2009. Other screenings included Hot Springs Doc, Los Angeles and San Francisco Women’s film fests, and various aviation museums, conventions, and air shows around the country.

Florence Lowe Barnes was once a well-known aviatrix and contemporary of Amelia Earhart who had a love for speed and danger – qualities which enabled her to become the first female stunt pilot in Hollywood, working for directors like Howard Hughes, before setting up a ranch on Edwards Air Force base that had a wild reputation as a test pilot hang out. Pope’s buoyant profile uncovers her forgotten history, exploring how the daughter of a well-to-do Pasadena family found herself married off to a priest, escaped her unhappy marriage by disguising herself as a man, and became unexpectedly embroiled in the Mexican Civil War, where she earned her masculine nickname, “Pancho.” Influenced by her grandfather’s love for flying, Pancho – who received lessons from Orville Wright while in her male guise – beat Earhart’s airspeed record before heading to Hollywood. When her hard-partying ways put an end to her flying career, she made a fresh start by forming the titular ranch – which despite its suggestive name, was not a brothel – and became a fixture on the airbase. Pope ably and genially celebrates a larger-than-life character who refused to let proscribed gender roles dictate her life.

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On TV: LITTLE WHITE LIE

little whiteComing to PBS’s Independent Lens next Monday, March 23: LITTLE WHITE LIE

Lacey Schwartz’s coming to grips with family secrets debuted at the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival last year. Its fest circuit has also included DOC NYC, New Orleans, Sidewalk, Black Harvest, BlackStar, Martha’s Vineyard African American, and Philadelphia Jewish fests, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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Cinéma du Reél 2015 Overview

imgresCinéma du Reél, the documentary festival of Paris, opens its 37th edition tonight, Thursday, March 19, and continues through Sunday, March 30. While programming remains geared to visual anthropology, this year’s event also has stated an openness to flexible considerations of nonfiction forms, represented by opening night selection AUSTERLITZ, a hybrid by Stan Neumann which draws inspiration from a novel by WG Sebald. The event’s various special screenings, retrospectives, and tributes – covering a range of creators from Haskell Wexler to Amit Dutta, and exploring nonfiction from China to Greece – also attempt to bridge the past with the future. The focus below, however, remains on the newer films in the fest’s lineup, as represented in its three feature competition sections: Continue reading

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Cleveland 2015: Documentary Overview

imagesThe 39th Cleveland International Film Festival kicks off tonight, Wednesday, March 18, and runs through Sunday, March 30. One of the nation’s best regional film events, the festival takes over the Ohio city with an impressive showcase of nearly 200 feature films and more than 200 shorts. The following offers a brief overview of the event’s feature documentary slate, broken down by the many competitions featured in the fest. Continue reading

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On Cable: THE MIND OF MARK DEFRIEST

1201x782-Key-IMAGE-_DeFriest-Courtesy-of-Found-Object-Films-and-Thought-Café-copy-1160x652Coming to Showtime tomorrow, Thursday, March 19: THE MIND OF MARK DEFRIEST

Gabriel London’s look at the surprising case of a legendary prisoner had its world premiere at Hot Docs last year. Other screenings have included DOC NYC, Los Angeles,, Denver, and Lone Star, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc upon its theatrical release here.

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On DVD: THE FORGOTTEN PLAGUE

forgotten plagueComing to DVD today, Tuesday, March 17: THE FORGOTTEN PLAGUE

Chana Gazit’s historical chronicle of tuberculosis debuted as part of PBS’s American Experience last month.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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New Directors/New Films 2015: Documentary Overview

nd nfThis year’s New Directors/New Films, a collaboration between the Museum of Modern Art and the Film Society of Lincoln Center, kicks off this Wednesday, March 18, and runs through Sunday, March 29. 2015’s 44th edition of the Spring favorite showcases 26 features from emerging filmmakers. Sadly, the nonfiction offerings, which never make up a large percentage of the event’s programming, have been halved relative to last year, with only two documentaries and one hybrid making the cut:

westernTwo made their debut at Sundance this past January: The Ross Brothers’ WESTERN (pictured), which looks at the way two border towns deal with the threat of cartel violence; and Stevan Riley’s LISTEN TO ME MARLON, a textured biographical portrait of Marlon Brando. The third, Simone Rapisarda Casanova’s hybrid THE CREATION OF MEANING, which was awarded at its premiere in Locarno, focuses on a Tuscan shepherd’s struggle with the encroachment of modernity on his way of life.

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On TV: 180 DAYS: HARTSVILLE

180-days-hartsvilleComing to PBS tomorrow, Tuesday, March 17: 180 DAYS: HARTSVILLE

Jacquie Jones and Gerald McLaurin’s chronicle of a year in South Carolina’s elementary school system makes its debut this week as part of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s “American Graduate” initiative.

Ranked 45th in the nation in education, South Carolina’s educators are under the gun to make improvements. On a practical level, this means raising student performance as measured by standardized tests. On a personal level, for the school officials featured in Jones and McLaurin’s profile, it means doing right by their students and their parents, recognizing the challenges they face due to poverty, and finding a way to instill a desire to learn – all in the 180 days they have to work with in a single school year. The filmmakers spent this year in the small town of Hartsville, focusing primarily on two elementary schools: West Hartsville, led by principal Tara King in her first year in the position; and Thornwell, overseen by veteran principal Julie Mahn. These school administrators take center stage in the proceedings, even engaging in some friendly inter-school rivalry to encourage school pride from their charges. King finds herself facing lower test scores than expected, as well as an unengaged parent base, while also having to deal with Rashon, a bright student whose bad behavior threatens to lead to expulsion and a continuation of the cycle of poverty that has held back his mother, Monay. Mahn, meanwhile, a white principal in the school with the highest concentration of African American kids being raised in poverty, knows the stakes – as the daughter of sharecroppers, she was the first in her own family to break the cycle through education, attending college and paving the way for her son to do the same. Joining them are other representatives of the education system, including Pierre Brown, a teacher who tries to serve as a male role model for Rashon; and Harris DeLoach, a local businessman who has invested millions into improving the school system. While the film briefly addresses the national controversies around Common Core, and South Carolina’s own response, this is one area where it overextends itself, and ends up feeling too cursory. When they stick with their engaging central subjects, Jones and McLaurin successfully show, in microcosm, the challenges to our education system, and how they are compounded in underserved communities.

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