Category Archives: Documentary

In Theatres: THE OTHER MAN: FW DE KLERK AND THE END OF APARTHEID

OTHER-articleLargeComing to theatres today, Friday, February 6: THE OTHER MAN: FW DE KLERK AND THE END OF APARTHEID

Nicolas Rossier’s portrait of the last white leader of South Africa made its debut at Durban last year. It went on to screen at IDFA this past November.

While Nelson Mandela and his role in the foundation of post-apartheid South Africa has been the subject of numerous documentaries, less attention has been paid to FW de Klerk, the nation’s president who oversaw the dismantling of the racist policy, and who instituted sweeping changes including Mandela’s release from prison. Rossier’s film aims to unpack de Klerk’s complex legacy, exploring, essentially, a leader who actively worked to bring about his own reign – one who ultimately publicly spoke out against the policy of apartheid, even if he disturbingly preferred the disingenuous term “separate development.” While the director benefits from direct access to the former president, with candid interviews offering some insight into de Klerk’s often pragmatic decisions, the most provocative aspects of the film emerge from archival footage – chiefly the signal of the turnover of power when Mandela publicly questioned de Klerk’s honesty, de Klerk’s decision to have Mandela address the nation after a violent racial massacre instead of himself in hopes of defusing a potential nationwide powderkeg, and the former leader’s testimony at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, in which he disavowed knowledge of assassination and violence against ANC leaders. Particularly in showcasing numerous critics who express skepticism or absolute disbelief of this latter claim, Rossier demonstrates a willingness to eschew hagiography, even if it seems his ultimate goal is to bolster the idea that de Klerk deserves more praise than he’s typically received for his pivotal role in partnering with Mandela to save South Africa from civil war and global sanctions by abandoning a repressive policy once embraced by his political party’s leadership.

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In Theatres: CALL FOR HELP

call-for-help.10274536.87Coming to theatres today, Friday, February 6: CALL FOR HELP

Lior Etziony and Michal Hanuka’s candid look at a ragtag group of relief workers makes its debut at New York City’s Cinema Village this weekend.

The devastation of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti drew the attention of the world. While many major nonprofit organizations descended on the island nation to assist in the relief efforts, the crisis also attracted the attention of unaffiliated individuals and unregistered groups, willing to jump into the trenches and help where larger forces might be stymied by bureaucracy. Etziony and Hanuka focus on a handful of such mavericks, who dub their makeshift NGO Global DIRT (Global Disaster Immediate Response Team). With the intention of assisting those Haitians who would otherwise slip through the cracks, Global DIRT, under the leadership of Adam, a young American Marine, his fellow soldier Sully, and student nurse Lauren, bends the rules to get supplies to those who seem in most need. Working with other young volunteers, including recovering alcoholic Like and photographer Stacey, the ramshackle group is followed as they answer the call to service – even if their methods are questionable and, arguably, might create more trouble than good, given a general lack of oversight and followup to the work that they do. While the filmmakers do an admirable job of fleshing out their subjects on the ground, exploring the various motivations – both practical and selfish – that led them to Haiti, the most intriguing element of the film, a self-reflexive follow up two years later, back in the States, is unfortunately given short shrift.

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Big Sky Documentary Film Festival 2015 Overview

big skyTonight sees the launch of the 12th edition of the Big Sky Documentary Film Festival, Montana’s premier film festival, which will run through Monday, February 16. The event hosts several competitive and non-competitive program strands, including a focus on local nonfiction filmmaking, sidebars on interactive docs, music, nature, sports and adventure, true crime, the American West, indigenous cinema, and a commemoration of the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, as well as retrospective series on the work of Sam Green and John Cohen. A representative selection is noted below:

siblingsAmong the ten titles included in the fest’s main competition, the Big Sky Feature Competition, are: Frode Fimland’s SIBLINGS ARE FOREVER (pictured), a portrait of an elderly pair of Norwegian farmers; Nima Shayeghi’s BOYS WITH BROKEN EARS, about the wrestling dreams of young Iranian men; Andrea Meller’s NOW EN ESPAÑOL, which revisits the popularity of Spanish-dubbed television programming for American Latino/a audiences; and Patty Dillon’s THERE WILL BE NO STAY, which explores the work of prison executioners.

Andwewereyoung-WEBNine works are eligible for the Big Sky Award Competition, including William J Saunders’ BILLY MIZE AND THE BAKERSFIELD SOUND, about the influential country musician; and Nick Brandestini’s CHILDREN OF THE ARCTIC, which focuses on the experiences of several Native Alaskan teens. The Made in Montana section highlights locally-produced work, including Cindy Stillwell and Tom Watson’s BARD IN THE BACKCOUNTRY, following a Montana Shakespeare troupe; and Andy Smetanka’s AND WE WERE YOUNG (pictured), a handcrafted stop-motion chronicle of WWI.

Broken-Song-WEBIncluded in the fest’s music-focused Sights & Sounds section are eleven feature documentaries, among them: Claire Dix’s profile of North Dublin street musicians, BROKEN SONG (pictured); Kay D Ray’s tribute to female jazz musicians, LADY BE GOOD: INSTRUMENTAL WOMEN IN JAZZ; and Francesco Merini and Helmut Failoni’s look at an Italian orchestra uniting young talents with experienced veterans, THE ORCHESTRA.

Bedevil-WEBFinally, a sampling of Big Sky’s other thematic programming includes Stranger Than Fiction, presenting unusual but true stories and subjects, such as Sam Carroll’s BEDEVIL (pictured), which follows a High Priestess’ efforts to run for city council; True Crime, which includes Gorman Bechard’s A DOG NAMED GUCCI, about a man’s efforts to protect animals from inhumane treatment; and the aforementioned 25th anniversary celebration of the ADA, which features Abigail Fuller and Sarah Ivy’s DO YOU DREAM IN COLOR?, an exploration of the lives of four blind teenagers.

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On Cable: THE JINX: THE LIFE AND DEATHS OF ROBERT DURST

the jinxPremiering on HBO this Sunday, February 8: THE JINX: THE LIFE AND DEATHS OF ROBERT DURST

Andrew Jarecki’s indepth portrait of the infamous real estate scion received a preview screening of its first episode at Sundance last month. The documentary series begins this weekend and will continue over the next six weeks on HBO.

I previously wrote about the series before Sundance here.

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In Theatres & On VOD: MAD AS HELL

Mad_As_Hell_0-620x350Coming to theatres and to VOD tomorrow, Friday, February 6: MAD AS HELL

Andrew Napier’s chronicle of the unlikely career of one of the world’s most popular online news hosts made its debut at Hot Docs last year, where it picked up a media award. It also screened at Santa Barbara. It now comes to theatres in New York City and Los Angeles, and to VOD platforms including Amazon Instant Video, Google Play, iTunes, Playstation, Vudu, Xbox, and YouTube, as well as Brighthouse, Clearleap, Comcast (Xfinity), Cox, RCN and Time Warner Cable.

Napier’s film focuses on the Young Turks, a political news program which has drawn over two billion views on YouTube since its inception, and, in particular, its founder and primary host, Cenk Uygur, a Turkish immigrant who abandoned a legal career to pursue a talk show dream. Napier reveals his unusual story, revealing his transformation from moderate Republican to liberal Democrat to a progressive critical of both parties and of corporate personhood – all the while avoiding hagiography to present the affable figure in a more rounded manner. As Uygur and the Young Turks’ popularity grows, so to do the opportunities to infiltrate mainstream media – but, as the film shows, this comes with a cost that Uygur may not be willing to concede. Napier offers an engaging look at media and political criticism through the ups and downs of the Young Turks program, revealing the possibilities, and limits, of new media.

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In Theatres: BALLET 422

ballet422_web_1Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, February 6: BALLET 422

Jody Lee Lipes’ behind-the-scenes look at the creation of a dance bowed at Tribeca last year. It went on to screen at Seattle, Zurich, Vancouver, Philadelphia, and Goteborg, among others.

In Lipes’ exquisitely shot film, Justin Peck, a 25-year-old dancer and choreographer with the New York City Ballet, is followed as he creates the company’s 422nd original production. Eschewing talking heads for a strictly observational approach that proves mesmerizing, Lipes reveals the creative process, step-by-step, from Peck’s tentative initial development to his ballet’s ultimate execution on the stage at Lincoln Center. What seems, at first glance, to be a simple concept proves deceptively more nuanced, as Peck, his dancers, and their team of musicians, costumers, and designers tackle the new project over the course of a scant few weeks, see it to fruition, and, in a perfectly realized denouement, reveal the realities of a dancer’s life. The result is a film that transcends its core, devoted audience to offer even non-dance fans a singular experience.

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In Theatres: 1971

1971Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, February 6: 1971

Johanna Hamilton’s exploration of a pivotal act of civil disobedience had its world premiere at Tribeca last year. It went on to screen at IDFA, Sheffield, AFI Docs, Traverse City, and CPH:DOX, among others, and recently won the Cinema Eye Honors’ Spotlight Award and the IDA ABCNews VideoSource Award.

Hamilton’s film tells the story of The Citizens’ Commission to Investigate the FBI, a group of citizen underground activists who planned and staged a raid of a regional FBI office in Media PA, in the process exposing the agency’s controversial and illegal surveillance program, COINTELPRO, which existed to infiltrate, subvert, and disrupt various social and political movements, from Civil Rights groups to anti-war efforts. Vowing secrecy since the titular year, Hamilton’s appealing chronicle allows the unheralded Commission’s members to finally reveal their identities and share their story – and the motivations for their actions – for the first time. While re-enactments are employed to recreate the break-in – never my preferred manner of exposition – they are at least used sparingly and are well-produced, lending a tension to the participants’ compelling retelling. Ultimately, the true power in the film is its reminder of the dangers of unchecked power – clearly attaining an unfortunate topicality in light of the more recent actions of the NSA – and in the potential impact of an aware and dissenting citizenry willing to make personal sacrifices in the face of its government’s ethical and legal transgressions.

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On VOD: GIUSEPPE MAKES A MOVIE

giuseppe makesComing to VOD tomorrow, Friday, February 6: GIUSEPPE MAKES A MOVIE

Adam Rifkin’s candid look at an outsider auteur had its world premiere at Hot Docs last year. Additional screenings followed at Los Angeles Film Festival, Rooftop Films, Houston Cinema Arts Festival, Hot Springs, Atlantic, and Poland’s New Horizons.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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Berlin 2015: Documentary Overview

berlin 2015The venerable Berlin International Film Festival turns 65 this year, opening tomorrow, Thursday, February 5 and running through Sunday, February 15. Germany’s largest film festival annually screens in excess of 400 films, which include this year nearly 80 new documentary features, as well as some retrospective work. In addition to this onscreen component, the Berlinale also features nonfiction-focused programming as part of the simultaneous European Film Market’s Meet the Docs initiative, made up of a Doc Spotlight series curated by IDFA, CPH:DOX, and DOK Leipzig, and a robust program of documentary panels, as well as the Berlinale Talents program’s Doc Station, in which ten nonfiction projects from five continents receive development support over the course of the event. Sadly, my schedule has not permitted me to attend this year, but if I were, I’d direct my viewing time to the following documentaries on offer:

pearlThe festival’s Competition section very rarely includes nonfiction work, but this year does present one documentary, THE PEARL BUTTON (pictured), auteur Patricio Guzmán’s meditation on Chile’s coastline and water; while Berlinale Special offers three, including Jack Pettibone Riccobono’s THE SEVENTH FIRE, about the threat of gang violence on a Native American reservation in Minnesota.

fassbinderDocumentary’s more typical home at the festival have been in the Panorama section, which this year showcases eighteen feature docs. Among these are portraits of notable figures, such as Christian Braad Thomsen’s FASSBINDER – TO LOVE WITHOUT DEMANDS (pictured), a personal tribute to the noted New German Cinema director; Jack Walsh’s FEELINGS ARE FACTS: THE LIFE OF YVONNE RAINER, which gives the acclaimed modern dancer/choreographer/filmmaker her due; and Jean-Gabriel Périot’s A GERMAN YOUTH, an archival rich portrait of key members of the Red Army Faction. Other Panorama titles include LGBT-focused work, such as Jan Soldat’s PRISON SYSTEM 4614, about prison fetishists, and Jannik Splidsboel’s MISFITS, a look at the lives of three queer Tulsa teens; as well as a look at the absurdity of war in Saeed Taji Farouky and Michael McEvoy’s TELL SPRING NOT TO COME THIS YEAR, which follows the Afghan National Army as they take over a dangerous province after the withdrawal of NATO troops.

flotelNonfiction and its hybrid forms traditionally have also been welcomed in the festival’s often more off-kilter Forum; this year twenty such features appear, including several work-focused films: Joaquim Pinto and Nuno Leonel’s FISH TAIL, about a fisherman in the Azores; Francesco Clerici’s HAND GESTURES, an observational portrait of an Italian bronze foundry; Michel K Zongo’s THE SIREN OF FASO FANI, a personal reflection on the decline of the Burkina Faso filmmaker’s hometown after the shuttering of its textile factory; Nikolaus Geyrhalter’s OVER THE YEARS, which similarly documents the consequences of the shutdown of a local community’s textile factory; and Janina Herhoffer’s AFTER WORK, which looks at group leisure activities from yoga to band practice. Additional films include Vladimir Tomic’s FLOTEL EUROPA (pictured), which revisits the director’s childhood as a Yugoslavian refugee taking up residence on a ship in Copenhagen; Marcin Malaszczak’s THE DAYS RUN AWAY LIKE WILD HORSES OVER THE HILLS, a focus on the ephemeral moments of everyday life; Jem Cohen’s COUNTING, an essay film exploring several cities; and Tatiana Brandrup’s CINEMA: A PUBLIC AFFAIR, about the curator of the now-closed Moscow Film Museum and his struggles with official forces.

so be itTwo documentaries for younger viewers appear in the Generation section: Kongdej Jaturanrasmee’s SO BE IT (pictured), which profiles two very different boys’ experiences of Buddhism; and Teboho Edkins’ COMING OF AGE, about South African teenagers who must choose between the life of a traditional shepherd or instead pursue education. Two new docs also appear in the NATIVe section, devoted to indigenous cinema, including María Dolores Arias Martínez’s ELDEST BROTHER, an observational portrait of a Chiapas elder as he navigates tradition and modernity.

tito'sLocal filmmakers’ work appears in Perspektive Deutsches Kino, including three documentaries. Among these are Saskia Walker and Ralf Hechelmann’s SEX: SPEAK, which attempts to explore sexuality through interviews; and Filippa Bauer’s UNOCCUPIED, an exploration of the lives of women facing empty nest syndrome. Other German work – specifically contenders for the Lola, the German Film Awards – appear in the Lola at Berlinale sidebar. Among these are seventeen docs, including: Annekatrin Hendel’s ANDERSON, on the German writer, secretly a Stasi spy; Ulrike Franke and Michael Loeken’s DIVINE LOCATION: A CITY REINVENTS ITSELF, about a new residential community developed against the backdrop of a traditionally industrial area; and Regina Schilling’s TITO’S GLASSES (pictured), which recounts the history of a Yugoslavian family who resettled in Germany.

omnivorousFinally, Berlinale’s popular food-focused Culinary Cinema section showcases a dozen films – among them: Luis González and Andrea Gómez’s COOKING UP A TRIBUTE, which follows the renowned Roca brothers on a multi-city tour of culinary reinvention; Anne Georget’s IMAGINARY FEASTS, an exploration of the common practice of prisoners writing recipes as a form of resistance; Yun Hwang’s AN OMNIVOROUS FAMILY’S DILEMMA (pictured), in which the director immerses herself in the lives of pigs; Phie Ambo’s GOOD THINGS AWAIT, about an aging biodynamic Danish farmer and the fate of his farm; and Willemiek Kluijfhout’s SERGIO HERMAN, FUCKING PERFECT, a profile of a Dutch masterchef whose pursuit of perfection threatens his family life.

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In Theatres: MATT SHEPARD IS A FRIEND OF MINE

matt shepardComing to theatres this Friday, February 6: MATT SHEPARD IS A FRIEND OF MINE

Michele Josue’s personal remembrance of a fallen friend made its world premiere at Mill Valley in 2013. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, IDFA, Cleveland, CNEX Taipei Doc, St Louis, Atlanta’s Out on Film, Rochester’s ImageOut, Miami Gay, Toronto’s Inside Out, and Russia’s Side by Side LGBT fests, among others.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
When gay college student Matthew Shepard’s savagely beaten body was discovered lashed to a fence near Laramie, Wyoming in 1998, the deadly consequences of homophobia received international attention. While Matt’s death left an indelible mark, the details of his life are less familiar. His friend Michele Josue turns to those who knew him best, and aided by personal photos, videos and journal entries, she constructs a poignant, multifaceted biography of a young man who was more than just a victim.

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