Category Archives: Documentary

On VOD: LOVE HOTEL

lovehotel31-770x433Coming to VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, August 12: LOVE HOTEL

Philip Cox and Hikaru Toda’s inside look at a discreet Japanese cultural mainstay premiered at Hot Docs this Spring. The doc has gone on to screen at Melbourne, NY Asian American, and Biografilm. FilmBuff now releases the film on various VOD platforms.

The tradition of short-term stay hotels or teahouses that facilitate sexual encounters has a long history in Japan. As Cox and Toda’s intimate film demonstrates, however, a recent conservative turn in the government threatens to make them a thing of the past. Against this backdrop, the film focuses on a single establishment, Osaka’s Angelo Love Hotel. As its staff contends with the “entertainment police” and their increasingly restrictive regulations, the hotel hosts several patrons, including a middle-aged couple trying to jumpstart their lovelife, a pair of closeted gay lawyers seeking privacy, a lonely older man, and a dominatrix servicing unsatisfied married men. Liberated by their surroundings, these and other customers demonstrate surprising candor, making an argument for the value of such establishments in a society that tends to downplay individual desires.

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On TV: NEUROTYPICAL

neuroComing to PBS’s POV for an encore screening tonight, Monday, August 11: NEUROTYPICAL

Adam Larsen’s insider look at life with autism had its world premiere at the Thessaloniki Doc fest in 2011. The film went on to screen at DOXA and Rooftop Films, among others, and to debut on POV last Summer.

As signaled by its title, a term autistic people use to refer to the non-autistic, Larsen’s film flips the conventional approach to autism in documentary projects by taking the autistic’s point of view. More than providing profiles of individuals on the autistic spectrum, Larsen reflects their perspectives on making sense of and finding strategies to operate within the often perplexing “normal” world, where people bizarrely like to blather on about themselves, the weather, or celebrity gossip for no good reason. Spotlighting a range of subjects, from a four-year-old who cannot communicate clearly, to teenagers and adults who have developed a range of systems – some humorous, others remarkably complex – to assist them in interacting with what often feels like another species, the film offers a surprising and provocative challenge to a pathological model of autism that often sees medication as the only option.

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On DVD: DANCING IN JAFFA

dancing in jaffaComing to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, August 12: DANCING IN JAFFA

Hilla Medalia’s exploration of a crosscultural Israeli/Palestinian dance program premiered at Tribeca last year. Other screenings included DocAviv, Sydney, Munich, and Jewish fests in Miami, Boston, London, Palm Beach, Calgary, San Francisco, DC, and elsewhere.

I previously wrote about the doc out of Tribeca here.

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On TV: DIAMOND IN THE DUNES

diamond_in_the_dunes-02Coming to PBS’s Global Voices series this Sunday, August 10: DIAMOND IN THE DUNES

Christopher Rufo’s exploration of the unifying power of baseball makes its debut this weekend as part of the WORLD Channel’s international doc series.

Set in China’s Xinjiang Province, Rufo’s film follows Parhat, one of the region’s indigenous Uyghur Muslim minority, as the youth leaves his rural village for university in the big city. His mother explains that he’s discovered a game that’s foreign to the Uyghur people – baseball. Living a segregated existence from the Han Chinese majority, the only venue for cross-cultural exchange is the baseball diamond, with Parhat captaining the university’s integrated squad – and the only team in the province. As they train for an entire year to compete in a single game against a Tibetan team 2000 miles away, Rufo follows Parhat and his teammates against the backdrop of an ongoing ethnic separatist conflict in the region which threatens to dissolve the team. Providing a rare look at an ethnic minority in China, the film – and its likeable protagonist – goes beyond a simple baseball team profile to successfully demonstrates the potential of sports to bridge cultural and religious divides.

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In Theatres: WHAT NOW? REMIND ME

140612_WhatNowMain1Coming to NYC’s Film Society of Lincoln Center tomorrow, Friday, August 8: WHAT NOW? REMIND ME

Joaquim Pinto’s personal essay on living with illness debuted last year at Locarno, where it claimed both FIPRESCI and Special Jury Prizes. It went on to screen at the New York Film Festival, Rotterdam, Vancouver, QueerLisboa, Hong Kong, Thessaloniki Doc, RIDM, Valdivia, DocLisboa, San Francisco, CPH:DOX, Edinburgh, and Seattle, among others. The Film Society’s week-long run comes in conjunction with a retrospective of Pinto’s previously directed films, as well as those he worked on as an acclaimed sound recordist and designer.

Over the course of nearly three hours, Pinto lays bare a year of his life – one marked by experimental treatments to keep both his HIV and Hepatitis C in check. Traveling between home in Portugal, clinic visits in Madrid, and a Summer farming project in the Azores, the director, his reticent husband Nuno, and their four expressive dogs figure in a compelling collage of sound and image, punctuated by Pinto’s running voiceover. With candor and vulnerability, he chronicles the effects of drugs on his system, and on his memory, the spectre of his mortality hanging over the entire project, brought into focus through reflections on past colleagues and mentors who have succumbed to AIDS. While this year-in-the-life conceit provides the film with a structure, it’s ultimately a loose one, with Pinto regularly indulging in welcome tangents through space and time, or shifting the focus away from himself to acknowledge the state of the world – such as the global financial crisis and conflict in Syria – or to reveal moments of sublime natural beauty, from the opening shot of a slug to a bee eating a hamburger to a dragonfly hovering around a blade of grass.

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In Theatres: THE DOG

thedog_00Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, August 8: THE DOG

Allison Berg and Frank Keraudren’s portrait of the real-life figure whose story inspired DOG DAY AFTERNOON had its world premiere at Toronto last year. It went on to screen at the New York Film Festival, Berlin, SXSW, Thessaloniki, Palm Springs, San Francisco, Cleveland, QDoc, and Montclair, among others.

I previously wrote about the film out of Toronto here.

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Special Screening: GIMME SHELTER

gimmeshelterComing to NYC’s Bronx Documentary Center tomorrow, Thursday, August 7: GIMME SHELTER

Albert Maysles, David Maysles, and Charlotte Zwerin’s chronicle of the Rolling Stones’ infamous 1969 concert tour debuted in 1970, and went on to Cannes the following year. It screens as part of the BDC’s series, The ’60s: Decade of Change, with Albert Maysles, a recent recipient of the National Medal of Arts, in attendance.

What began as a Direct Cinema portrait of the popular rock band became a disturbing record of a notorious concert, the free Altamont Speedway show on December 6, 1969, recognized by some as “the day the Sixties died.” Acknowledging the violence that marked that event, which culminated in the stabbing death of an African American student attendee by a Hell’s Angel turned semi-official security guard, the film alternates on-the-road and performance footage with scenes of the band watching the latter, with particular attention paid to the hastily thrown together free concert that ended the tour, from scene-stealing attorney negotiations for the SF venue to the reactions of organizers and performers to the many incidents that preceded the fatal stabbing. In contrast to the free-flowing peace and love that characterized the concert’s East Coast forebear Woodstock, a palpable tension hangs over Altamont, turning individual fans into a scary crowd, which no appeal from either Grace Slick or Mick Jagger can hope to soothe. It’s gripping cinema, an indelible profile less of a band than of the influence of their music on a generation, and a precursor to the turmoil that was to follow.

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Special Screening: FOREST OF THE DANCING SPIRITS

Forest_of_the_Dancing_Spirits_1.470x264Coming to NYC’s Rooftop Films this Friday, August 8: FOREST OF THE DANCING SPIRITS

Linda Västrik’s ethnographic study of a pygmy tribe debuted at Göteborg last year. It went on to screen at Hot Docs, IDFA. DocPoint, and True/False, among others.

I included the film in my Hot Docs coverage here.

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On DVD: MODERN LIFE

Modern-Life-001Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, August 5: MODERN LIFE

Raymond Depardon’s exploration of rural France debuted at Cannes in 2008. Its extensive festival circuit included Rotterdam, London, Sao Paulo, San Francisco, Portland, BAFICI, Seattle, Jeonju, Palm Springs, and Jihlava, among others. The doc was recently released on VOD by Cinedigm, and is now out on DVD via First Run Features.

The third in a series by the acclaimed filmmaker, Depardon’s film takes as its subjects a handful of French dairy farmers. Visiting each in turn, with simple, personal narration establishing basic facts, and his camera trained on the road ahead, the filmmaker provides a literal travelogue through the French countryside, before settling at the table, in the barn, or in the field across from his often laconic subjects. They represent a traditional existence that would seem to put an ironic spin on the film’s title, though the encroachment of modernity is borne out as Depardon subtly teases out the increasing challenges of maintaining their routines in the face of senescence, economics, or, in the case of the unforgettable octogenarian bachelor Privat brothers, their nephew’s new wife, an interloper from the city. Elegaic and humanistic, with moments both bittersweet and humorous, the film bears witness to a vanishing way of life.

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Locarno 2014: Documentary Overview

imagesTomorrow, Wednesday, August 6, is the kick off for the 67th edition of the Locarno Film Festival, which unspools approximately 100 features over the next ten days. The long running Summer event continues to surprise, positioned to introduce its eclectic fare in advance of the major Fall festivals when some of their selections will come to North America for the first time. In contrast to some of the other A-list fests, the Swiss festival affords significant space in its slate for nonfiction and hybrid work – approximately 30 features this year – with such offerings typically appearing spread throughout its sections rather than relegated to one ghettoized program. The following spotlights some of this work: Continue reading

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