Beginning its third decade this Thursday, October 10, the 21st edition of the Hamptons International Film Festival runs through Monday, October 14. More than seventy features will screen in the tony townships located about 100 miles east of New York City, offering locals a chance to sample potential Oscar contenders and acclaimed international work, while also drawing Manhattan industry for an early Fall weekend getaway. Among the lineup are more than two dozen feature docs, with some of the highlights noted below. Continue reading
Category Archives: Documentary
Hamptons 2013: Documentary Overview
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On TV: CODE OF THE WEST
Coming to WORLD Channel’s America ReFramed series tomorrow, Tuesday October 8: CODE OF THE WEST
Rebecca Richman Cohen’s exploration of medical marijuana made its debut at SXSW last year. It went on to screen at Camden, DOC NYC, Traverse City, and the IFF Boston, among others.
I previously wrote about the doc out of SXSW here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
On DVD: MEA MAXIMA CULPA
Coming to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, October 8: MEA MAXIMA CULPA: SILENCE IN THE HOUSE OF GOD
Alex Gibney’s indictment of clergy sexual abuse debuted last year at Toronto. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, London, Chicago, Woodstock, and the Hamptons.
I included the doc in my Toronto coverage here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
In Theatres: WALTER
Coming to NYC’s IFC Center today, Friday, October 4: WALTER: LESSONS FROM THE WORLD’S OLDEST PEOPLE
Hunter Weeks’ quest for insight from people born over a century ago made its debut at Oregon’s Bend Film Festival last month. In addition to its NYC bow this weekend, the film expands to Los Angeles next week, with special screenings in select other cities planned.
Inspired by meeting Walter Breuning, at that point the world’s oldest man at 114, Weeks set out to spend more time with him and to meet other supercentenarians – individuals who have lived to the age 110 or later – to gain some insight about longevity and how life looks from their rather unique perspectives. Usually accompanying him on his visits, or otherwise processing the experiences, is his fianceé, Sarah. Some of the seniors are active and very communicative, others less so, speaking more through caretaking relatives, but all embody some basic concept – purpose, patience, kindness, family, happiness, and love – that might be seen as a factor in their long-livedness. While the supers share an occasional memory revealing what life was like in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the film isn’t meant as a biography, but instead as more of an inspirational instructive, as signaled by its subtitle. The real subjects are Hunter and Sarah, who appear very often on camera discussing the project together or with friends, at the relative beginning of their lives in contrast to these individuals at the very end of theirs. As a whole, they devote too much of the film to themselves, but it’s based on good intentions. Functioning in the place of their audience, they reflect on the lessons learned from Walter and the others, suggesting how they – and their viewers – might put them in practice as they grow older.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
On TV: BROOKLYN CASTLE
Coming to POV as part of the PBS Indies Showcase this coming Monday, October 7: BROOKLYN CASTLE
Katie Dellamaggiore’s profile of inner-city junior high school chess champions debuted at SXSW last year, where it picked up an audience award. The film went on to screen at Cleveland, Hot Docs, Brooklyn, Nantucket, Dallas, and Silverdocs, among others, before a limited theatrical and DVD release.
I previously wrote about the doc out of SXSW here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
On Cable: VALENTINE ROAD
Coming to HBO for its Docs Fall series this coming Monday, October 7: VALENTINE ROAD
Marta Cunningham’s nuanced exploration of a school shooting had its world premiere at Sundance this year. It went on to screen at Miami, Hot Docs, Seattle, Big Sky, Melbourne, Inside Out, NewFest, and Provincetown, among others.
My pre-Sundance profile of the doc may be found here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
In Theatres: LINSANITY
Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, October 4: LINSANITY
Evan Jackson Leong’s exploration of the man behind the phenomenon premiered at Sundance earlier this year. Its fest circuit has included SXSW, Hawaii, Hong Kong, NY’s Asian American, LA Asian Pacific, and Pacific Rim, among others.
I profiled the doc before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
Busan 2013: Documentary Overview
Now entering into its 18th year, the Busan International Film Festival – beginning today, Thursday, October 3, and running through Saturday, October 12 – has established itself as Asia’s premier film event. Supporting the work of Korean filmmakers while also offering an expansive view of the rest of Asia, the event draws many US and European programmers seeking new work from the region. Local audiences are well-served with an international lineup that highlights titles that have made a splash at some of the other major festivals around the world, from Cannes to Venice to Toronto. Just under 300 films are in this year’s lineup, with only 10% of those being documentaries, including Gianfranco Rosi’s surprise Venice winner, SACRO GRA, an intimate exploration of Rome’s large ring road and those living alongside it. The following is a sampling of the most intriguing new nonfiction on offer in the festival’s Wide Angle section.
Eleven titles vie in Busan’s Documentary Competition, part of the Wide Angle section, including: Aya Hanabusa’s TALE OF A BUTCHER SHOP (pictured), a profile of a Japanese family butcher business, from slaughter to sales; Baby Ruth Villarama’s JAZZ IN LOVE, a portrait of a crosscultural gay marriage between a young Filipino and a middle-aged German; Tiong Guan Saw’s PAST PRESENT, following director Tsai Ming-liang’s revisitation of his past and how it informs his filmmaking; Lyam Kim’s DREAM HOUSE BY THE BORDER, an exploration of the impact of Korea’s split between North and South as reflected in people’s homes; and Sung-bong Cho’s GUREOMBI – THE WIND IS BLOWING, chronicling the resistance of Jeju Islanders to a planned military base.
The Wide Angle section also hosts the fest’s other main collection of nonfiction, Documentary Showcase. Of the seventeen titles here, some of the new or lesser-known include: Hong-Ki Lee’s SPLENDID BUT SAD DAYS (pictured), a portrait of the harsh life of a foulmouthed seventy-year-old fisherwoman; Xiaolu Guo’s LATE AT NIGHT – VOICES OF ORDINARY MADNESS, a look at disenfranchised and marginal residents of London’s East End as they face gentrification; Tonislav Hristov’s SOUL FOOD STORIES, an exploration of Bulgaria through a food-focused microcosm; Lu Zhang’s SCENERY, profiling the experiences of immigrant workers in Korea; and Hojae Lee’s LAZY HITCHHIKERS’ TOUR DE EUROPE, following shiftless Korean college dropouts as they travel abroad for a year.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
In Theatres: THE SUMMIT
Coming to theatres this Friday, October 4: THE SUMMIT
Nick Ryan’s look back at the deadliest day in mountaineering history made its debut at London last year. It had its North American premiere at Sundance, where it claimed the World Cinema editing award. Other stops on the fest circuit include Sundance London, Guth Gafa, New Zealand, ActionFest, Boulder, Seattle, Melbourne, Dublin, Vancouver, and Sheffield, among others.
My pre-Sundance profile of the doc may be found here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
Woodstock 2013: Documentary Overview
Upstate New York’s “fiercely independent” film event, the Woodstock Film Festival, turns 14 this year. Opening today, Wednesday, October 2, the fest runs through this Sunday, October 6, unspooling over 125 films during its run. Of these, more than fifty are features, and about half of those are documentaries. The following highlights a selection of titles I haven’t previously covered here.
A couple of titles making their world premiere at the festival this year are Joe Berlinger’s HANK: FIVE YEARS FROM THE BRINK (pictured), a portrait of the former Secretary of the Treasury Hank Paulson and how he weathered the 2008 economic crisis; and Aram Garriga’s AMERICAN JESUS, an expansive survey of the influence of evangelical Christianity on American culture. Dana Ben-Ari’s BREASTMILK, an exploration of the challenges and misconceptions around breastfeeding, makes its North American bow; while Alex Stonehill and Bradley Hutchinson’s BARZAN, about an Iraqi refugee caught up in charges of terrorism, has its East Coast premiere here.
Among Woodstock’s New York premieres are Haskell Wexler’s FOUR DAYS IN CHICAGO, chronicling protests against last year’s NATO Summit in the Windy City; Sierra Pettengill and Jamila Wignot’s TOWN HALL, a portrait of two Tea Party activists in the lead-up to last year’s presidential election; Rob Kuhns’ BIRTH OF THE LIVING DEAD, a history and tribute to George Romero’s cult classic zombie film; and Jeremy Workman’s MAGICAL UNIVERSE (pictured), the story of the director’s unique relationship with an outsider artist whose muse is Barbie.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
