Category Archives: Documentary

In Theatres: MORE THAN THE RAINBOW

More-than-a-Rainbow-Key-Image-Photo-by-Arlene-Muller-580x300Coming to theatres today, Friday, May 2: MORE THAN THE RAINBOW

Dan Wechsler’s portrait of a New York street photographer had its world premiere at DOC NYC in 2012. It also screened at SF DocFest and at the Coney Island Film Festival, where it won best documentary.

From behind the wheel of the taxi cab he drove in the late 1970s-1980s, Matt Weber captured scenes of NYC life with his camera, often focusing on lives on the margins, people who were otherwise rarely the subject of a photographer’s lens. Self-taught, he made the plunge to full-time artist in 1990, selling his hack medallion and taking to the streets to follow his passion. Wechsler’s appealing film provides a platform for Weber to reveal his story, and that of his beloved city, frozen in time in his evocative black and white portraits. Weber makes for an affable Everyman, bolstered by comments from admirers and fellow street photogs, as they reflect on the changing face of their artform and of the cities they chronicle.

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DOXA 2014 Overview

doxa_logo_greyscaleTomorrow, Friday, May 2, sees the start of the 13th edition of DOXA, Vancouver’s documentary film festival, which will continue through Sunday, May 12, presenting more than sixty documentary features in its lineup. The fest is bookended by two films which recently premiered at Tribeca: Orlando von Einsiedel’s VIRUNGA, about the struggle to protect one of Africa’s largest national parks, opens the event, while Brent Hodge’s A BRONY TALE, a new film about the MY LITTLE PONY male fan subculture, brings it to a close. The following offers select highlights from the rest of the programming:

bigcharitySocial issue docs are grouped under the Justice Forum heading, which returns to DOXA for the fifth year, and includes: Dennis Allen’s CRAZYWATER, a personal exploration of Native American substance abuse; Alexander John Glustrom’s BIG CHARITY (pictured), about the fate of a New Orleans hospital in the wake of Katrina; Jesper Wachtmeister’s MICROTOPIA, on the emergence of space conserving urban design; and Jennifer Anderson and Vernon Lott’s MASSACRED FOR GOLD, a chronicle of the murder of Chinese gold miners in the Pacific Northwest of 1887.

huhuOther notable newer or recent features include several character portraits: Adam Gray and Andrew Gray’s FLY COLT FLY: LEGEND OF THE BAREFOOT BANDIT, a partly animated hybrid about the infamous outlaw Colton Harris-Moore; Shen Jie’s LITTLE PROLETARIAN, about a fourteen-year-old Chinese juvenile delinquent; La Zha’s HUHU (pictured), a child-focused portrait of rural life for a Chinese Muslim ethnic group; Rosa Rogers’ CASABLANCA CALLING, which follows female Muslim leaders combatting misogyny in Morocco; Sara Rastegar’s MY RED SHOES, an autobiographical portrait of the filmmaker’s parents, former Iranian Marxist revolutionaries; and Menna Laura Meijer’s 69: LOVE SEX SENIOR, which candidly explores sexuality among the older set.

breathFinally, a number of DOXA’s selections capture places, such as: Bo Wang’s CHINA CONCERTO, a meditation on China’s unique approach to capitalism and consumption; Carl Javér’s FREAK OUT!, about an early 20th century Utopian community in Switzerland; Florent Tillon’s LAS VEGAS MEDITATION, an anthropological survey of the Recession-era Nevadan desert city; Jide Tom Akinleminu’s PORTRAIT OF A LONE FARMER, a profile of the Nigerian filmmaker’s family farm; and Marcos Pimentel’s BREATH (pictured), an observational portrait of a rural Brazilian community.

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On TV: A FRAGILE TRUST

A-Fragile-Trust-Key-Image-280x140Coming to PBS’s Independent Lens this coming Monday, May 5: A FRAGILE TRUST: PLAGIARISM, POWER, AND JAYSON BLAIR AT THE NEW YORK TIMES

Samantha Grant’s exploration of the Jayson Blair scandal premiered at Sheffield last year. Its festival circuit included DOC NYC, the Hamptons, Denver, Big Sky, Thessaloniki, Atlanta, Sebastopol Doc, and Cleveland, among others, before a limited theatrical release last month.

I previously wrote about the film out of DOC NYC here.

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In Theatres: KIDNAPPED FOR CHRIST

kidnappedforchristComing to theatres this Friday, May 2: KIDNAPPED FOR CHRIST

Kate S Logan’s look at a disturbing Evangelical Christian behavior modification facility made its debut at Slamdance earlier this year, winning the documentary audience award. It has gone on to screen at Big Sky, Cleveland, Nashville, Miami Gay, and Phoenix.

Despite its scenic setting in the Dominic Republic, Escuela Caribe is hardly a welcome getaway for its inhabitants, teenagers who have been abducted from their homes with the consent of their parents for perceived behavioral problems. Forced to endure the isolation and ludicrously strict rules of their new, bootcamp-like environment, teens like Logan’s primary subject, David, live in limbo, not even guaranteed of release after they turn eighteen. While some inmates briefly reveal some past behavior that might give cause to their parents’ concerns, David is only there because he came out to his parents. When he turns to Logan for help, asking her to pass a note back to his friends about his predicament, this shifts the direction of the student filmmaker’s project to question the rehabilitation function of the facility and to detail the struggle to secure his freedom. Unfortunately, at the same time, this seems to grant Logan license to make herself an active participant in the film, a distracting approach which I’ve written about before and remain convinced is, as is the case here, usually unnecessary. Ultimately, the idea behind the film is much more compelling than the execution, though it should be noted that, at least initially, Logan is able to get some surprisingly candid and eye-opening interviews with the institution’s staff.

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In Theatres: UNCLAIMED

Unclaimed_5.470x264Coming to theatres this Friday, May 2: UNCLAIMED

Michael Jorgensen’s investigation into the potential emergence of a long-thought deceased Vietnam vet premiered at Hot Docs last year. It went on to screen at Sarasota, WorldFest Houston, Kansas, Ft Lauderdale, and Washington DC’s GI fest.

I included the film in my Hot Docs coverage here.

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On DVD: APPROVED FOR ADOPTION

approvedComing to DVD today, Tuesday, April 29: APPROVED FOR ADOPTION

Jung and Laurent Boileau’s animated pseudo-doc memoir debuted at the Annecy Animation fest in 2012. It went on to screen at Gijon, Torino, NY’s Children fest, DocsBarcelona. Sydney, AFI Docs, CPH:DOX, and several animation fests around the world.

I previously wrote about the film out of AFI Docs here.

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On DVD: THESE BIRDS WALK

these birds walkComing to DVD today, Tuesday, April 29: THESE BIRDS WALK

Omar Mullick and Bassam Tariq’s exploration of Pakistan’s street children premiered at True/False last year. Its festival circuit also included SXSW, Dallas, BAMcinemaFest, Nashville, Hot Docs, Seattle, and Melbourne, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc out of True/False here.

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On TV: COME HELL OR HIGH WATER: THE BATTLE FOR TURKEY CREEK

Come Hell Or High Water- Turkey Creek 2Coming to PBS’s America ReFramed on the WORLD Channel tomorrow, Tuesday, April 29: COME HELL OR HIGH WATER: THE BATTLE FOR TURKEY CREEK

Leah Mahan’s chronicle of an imperiled community and heritage made its debut at the New Orleans Film Festival last year, where it won the documentary audience award. Other stops have included Washington DC’s Environmental fest and the upcoming SF Green fest.

Filming over a decade, Mahan focuses on Derrick Evans, a Boston-based teacher who is a sixth generation descendant of the freed slaves who formed the coastal Mississippi community of Turkey Creek in the 1860s. When development threatens his old home, including the bulldozing of ancestral graves to accommodate the ever-expanding neighboring city of Gulfport, Evans returns to the South to take a stand and protect not only his roots, but the vibrant wetlands that are threatened. Though initially planning a short-term stay, Hurricane Katrina and Rita, and, later, the BP Deepwater Horizon spill, add to the challenges Evans and his neighbors face. While Evans is an appealing protagonist, there’s a bit too much focus placed on him at the expense of the far more intriguing setting and history of Turkey Creek, which begs for further expansion than is provided here.

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On TV: ZIPPER

Zipper-Film-Still-1-Photo-by-Amy-Nichoslon-580x300Coming to PBS’s WNET-Thirteen tonight, Monday, April 28: ZIPPER

Amy Nicholson’s exploration of the transformation of Coney Island debuted at DOC NYC in 2012, where it won a special jury prize. Its fest circuit also included Big Sky, Atlanta, and Montclair before a limited theatrical and VOD release last year.

I previously included the film in my DOC NYC coverage here.

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On Cable: ALL ABOUT ANN: GOVERNOR RICHARDS OF THE LONE STAR STATE

all_about_annComing to HBO tonight, Monday, April 28: ALL ABOUT ANN: GOVERNOR RICHARDS OF THE LONE STAR STATE

Keith Patterson and Phillip Schopper’s tribute to the famed Texan politician premiered in an earlier version at Silverdocs in 2012. After being acquired by HBO, the project was remade, premiering earlier this month at Tribeca.

Patterson and Schopper’s film opens with the fiery silver-haired governor’s unforgettable speech at the 1988 Democratic National Convention which rightly made her a national figure, before it travels further back in time to reveal Richards’ unlikely path to politics as a progressive Democrat in a traditionally Republican state. While interviews with admirers and colleagues provide occasional context, the late Richards’ herself often tells her own story throughout, via archival press interviews and a copious assortment of media appearances and often hilarious political speeches demonstrating her vision of the “New Texas.” The filmmakers construct a thoroughly engaging play-by-play of three pivotal elections – her election to State Treasurer (the first woman elected to statewide office in decades), her hard-fought gubernatorial run, and her Karl Rove-orchestrated re-election loss to George W Bush. New in this version is the addition of information about Richards’ life after elected office, campaigning for women politicians and working as a lobbyist – though the latter is given only cursory treatment – before her death due to esophageal cancer in 2006.

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