Category Archives: Overviews

2013 DOC NYC in Focus: BLOOD IS THICKER

Beyond-Broken-Key-Image2-580x300DOC NYC‘s penultimate shorts program this year turns the spotlight on family and the influence they have on us.

DOC NYC Program Description:

BLOOD IS THICKER:
Thursday, November 21 at 9:15pm

This program demonstrates the bonds of family, even under the most trying circumstances. In BEYOND BROKEN, Vasso, dependent on her family after a brutal attack, turns to art to find the will to go on (USA, 38 min., Andrew Morreale). A grandson realizes his late grandfather’s secret dream of becoming a filmmaker in QUICKSAND (USA, 8 min., Lance Oppenheim). SOFTENING (Canada, 39 min, Kelly O’Brien) explores the relationship between the filmmaker’s special needs son and the rest of the family. (85 min. total)

Why You Should Attend:
Family relationships, functional or dysfunctional, are universal, making these shorts resonant for all audiences. The particular situations these families find themselves in offer opportunities to reflect on what matters most in our lives.

More Info:
To purchase tickets, follow the link from the program page by clicking on the program title above.

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2013 DOC NYC in Focus: Doc-A-Thon Day 3 – Fund Your Doc

temp doc nyc coverDay Three of DOC NYC‘s Doc-A-Thon provides an overview of the ever-changing landscape of documentary funding and what that means for your creative control. All of these sessions take place at the IFC Center next Wednesday, November 20: Continue reading

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RIDM 2013 Overview

RIDM_LOGO_web2013 marks the sweet sixteen for the Montreal International Documentary Festival, better known to our French-speaking Northern neighbors as RIDM (Anglophones, that stands for Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal), opening tonight, Wednesday, November 13 with Sundance and Toronto audience award winner THE SQUARE. Closing on Sunday, November 24 with director Annie St-Pierre’s local interest title FERMIÉRES, about Quebec volunteer farm women’s groups, the festival will screen over sixty new and recent feature documentaries, as well as additional retrospectives (Marcel Ophüls and Harvard’s Sensory Ethnography Lab), transmedia projects, and shorts. I’ve never attended, unfortunately, and the simultaneously running DOC NYC will be keeping me plenty busy, but if I were in beautiful Montreal, the following newer films would be highest on my list:

arielRIDM holds four separate competitions – one for shorts, and three for features and mid-lengths. Among the dozen International Features titles are several I’ve noted on this site before, including Susanna Helke’s AMERICAN VAGABOND and Gonçalo Tocha’s THE MOTHER AND THE SEA; and from the International Medium-Lengths, films like Dora Garcia’s THE JOYCEAN SOCIETY and Valéry Rosier’s SILENCE RADIO. Several of the eleven Canadian Features competition are unfamiliar to me, with the most intriguing being: John Walker’s ARCTIC DEFENDERS, about the indigenous struggle that led to the creation of Nunavut; Dominic Gagnon’s HOAX_CANULAR, on the end of the world as envisioned by youth-created amateur online videos; Julie Perron’s LE SEMEUR, about a man who preserves seeds to ensure agricultural biodiversity and history; and Laura Bari’s ARIEL (pictured), a decade-long quest to design new legs for the filmmaker’s paraplegic brother.

divinoThe festival’s non-competitive Panorama includes several separate sections, including a collection of auteur films and festival favorites in Special Presentations; music docs in Beat Dox; transmedia projects in Docs 2.0; the current affair-driven Horizons, including Dieudo Hamadi’s ATALAKU, about paid campaigners for Congolese elections, and Alessandra Celesia’s AN ITALIAN MIRAGE, following Italians seeking jobs in remote Alaska; the perception-challenging Against the Grain, which includes Mariam Abu-Khaled, Udi Aloni, and Batoul Taleb’s ART/VIOLENCE, looking at Palestine’s Freedom Theatre in the wake of its founder’s assassination, and Tiago Campos’ MASTER AND DIVINO (pictured), about a missionary and an indigenous Amazonian, both with a passion for filmmaking; and the environmentally-focused Territories, such as Amy Miller’s NO LAND NO FOOD NO LIFE, on the devastating local impact of industrial agricultural, and Jean-Nicolas Orhon’s BIDONVILLE: ARCHITECTURES DE LA VILLE FUTURE, a rumination on shantytowns around the world.

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2013 DOC NYC in Focus: OBSESSIONS

Derby-Groma-Key-Image-Photo-by-Lee-Towndrow-580x300This fourth collection of DOC NYC shorts profiles a wide range of individuals who get swept away in various passions or preoccupations.

DOC NYC Program Description:

OBSESSIONS:
Wednesday, November 20 at 9:30pm

Collectors, curiosity seekers, and compulsives. FLUTTER (USA/Canada, 8 min., Dara Bratt) explores a lonely retiree’s love of butterfly collecting, while BUG PEOPLE (USA, 15 min., Paul Meyers) examines our odd aversion to insects. TANGO (Brazil, 6 min., Louis Robin) questions racetrack attendees about gambling. Discarded photos lead to a search for vaudeville performers DERBY & GROMA (Canada, 17 min., Kara Blake). Rollerskating recaptures the past in SKATE YRSELF CLEAN (USA, 7 min., Janna Jude Brown). THE EMERGENCY KIT (USA/Denmark, 11 min., Christian Svanes Kolding) shows an expectant mother’s anxiety around impending disasters. Freeman Dyson reveals his never-realized ATOMIC DREAM (USA, 26 min., Derek Lartaud & Melanie Ruiz) of nuclear bomb-powered space travel. (91 min. total)

Why You Should Attend:
We all have things that compel us, from benign hobbies and aspirations to more troubling vices and addictions. The individuals profiled in these intriguing films reflect on theirs.

More Info:
To purchase tickets, follow the link from the program page by clicking on the program title above.

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2013 DOC NYC in Focus: Doc-A-Thon Day 2 – Finish Your Doc

temp doc nyc coverThe second day of DOC NYC‘s panel series, Doc-A-Thon, focuses on post-production. All of these masterclasses take place at the IFC Center next Tuesday, November 19: Continue reading

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2013 DOC NYC in Focus: THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT

Key-Image-Kids-are-all-right-Dogs-On-A-Beach-Key-Image-Photo-by-Spencer-Gilley-580x300My third DOC NYC shorts program focuses on younger protagonists – from pre-adolescents to young adults.

DOC NYC Program Description:

THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT:
Wednesday, November 20 at 7:15pm

These five shorts capture the honesty and wisdom of youth. Cancer upends a dancer’s dreams in LIKE A DANCE (USA, 6 min., Jill Orschel). FOLLOW MY STEPS (USA, 16 min., Andrew Hida) details a friendship between a 13-year-old and a 21-year-old, bonded by physical disability. An undocumented young woman shares her story in I WAS BORN IN MEXICO, BUT…(USA, 12 min., Corey Ohama). Classroom and playground culture clash when a young Native American boy moves to Norway in EAGLE BOY (Norway, 27 min., Gry Elisabeth Mortensen). A group of Native children guide strangers through their remote island community in DOGS ON A BEACH (Canada, 23 min., Spencer Gilley & Andrew Hovi). (85 min. total)

Why You Should Attend:
These portraits cover everything from health issues and immigration to identity and culture differences – all from the perspectives of disarmingly astute and open young men and women.

More Info:
To purchase tickets, follow the link from the program page by clicking on the program title above.

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2013 DOC NYC in Focus: Doc-A-Thon Day 1 – Shoot Your Doc

temp doc nyc coverWhile I wasn’t responsible for programming Doc-A-Thon, DOC NYC‘s panel series, this year, I can’t recommend it highly enough. Each day is focused on a different part of the filmmaking process, and includes four masterclasses or special discussions with leading documentary filmmakers and industry representatives, all taking place between 10:30am-5:00pm at the IFC Center, beginning next Monday, November 18.

Monday’s Day 1 begins with the essentials of production: Continue reading

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2013 DOC NYC in Focus: MAN & BEAST

Disarming-Falcons-Key-Image-Photo-by-Albert-Larew-580x300The second DOC NYC shorts program I curated this year explores the bonds that exist between people and their pets, livestock, or zoo animals.

DOC NYC Program Description:

MAN & BEAST:
Saturday, November 16 at 1:45pm

People and their animals. A Bedouin sheepherder contemplates moving his family to the city in FACES (Jordan, 16 min., Said Najmi). HERD IN ICELAND (USA, 28 min., Lindsay Blatt & Paul Taggart) chronicles the annual roundup of the country’s purebred horses, after a summer roaming free. OF COWS AND MEN (USA, 4 min., Emily Fraser) follows a dairy farmer during difficult economic times. Man and bird unite in the deserts of Pakistan in DISARMING FALCONS (USA, 15 min., Wendy Johnson & Annie Nocenti). PAST THEIR PRIME (USA, 23 min., Becca Friedman) explores the lives of geriatric zoo animals. (86 min. total)

Why You Should Attend:
Who doesn’t love animals? Beyond cats and dogs, these films offer insight into the rapport we share with the wild kingdom, from birds of prey to aging rhinos and apes.

More Info:
To purchase tickets, follow the link from the program page by clicking on the program title above.

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2013 DOC NYC in Focus: PEOPLE & PLACES

On-Blooming-Art-Key-Image-Photo-by-Simon-Luethi-580x300Like last year, I’ve once again curated six collections of short films for DOC NYC in my role as Senior Programmer. This first program looks at interactions between individuals and their habitats, from stories of underground living to the efforts of city dwellers to work with nature.

DOC NYC Program Description:

PEOPLE & PLACES:
Saturday, November 16 at 11:30am

Unexpected environments. A BEAUTIFUL WASTE (USA, 6 min., Jon Kasbe) explores NYC’s vibrant sewer system, while men reflect on their time living in the tunnels under LOST VEGAS (USA, 24 min., Steve Birnbaum). WHITE BLAZE (USA, 22 min., Brian Bolster) profiles a trail angel who helps Appalachian Trail hikers. An artist becomes walking artwork to add color to grey NYC in ON BLOOMING ART (USA, 6 min., Cathryne Czubek). NEW YORK TIMES (USA, 12 min., Dana O’Keefe) is a city symphony in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. Urban farming takes to the rooftop in BROOKLYN FARMER (USA, 27 min., Michael Tyburski).

Why You Should Attend:
There’s an element of surprise and discovery to these films, sometimes disarming, other times more understated. Together, they present a focus on spaces and how we respond to them and in them.

More Info:
To purchase tickets, follow the link from the program page by clicking on the program title above.

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Rome 2013: Documentary Overview

rome-film-festivalThe eighth edition of the Rome Film Festival begins tonight, Friday, November 8, and runs through next Sunday, November 17. In its relatively brief existence, the event has seen more than its fair share of growing pains as it tries to carve out a space for itself in the European festival scene that already includes such heavy hitters as Cannes, Venice, Berlin, and Locarno. Beholden, like so many Italian cultural events, to larger political power struggles within the country, the festival has tried to balance being a distinctive cinema event with appealing to segments of its audience that might be more concerned about celebrities and a party atmosphere than in discovering groundbreaking new work. Among its approximately 120 feature length films, there are just over two dozen documentaries on offer, the majority world premieres.

mutoniaWhile a couple of docs appear in the official Out of Competition section, that and the main Competition are decidedly fiction-focused. Significantly more nonfiction is part of CinemaXXI, an international strand exploring innovative new filmmaking. By my count, 14 of the 25 features here are docs or hybrids, including: ZimmerFrei’s HOMETOWN/MUTONIA (pictured), a portrait of an experimental outsider community; Vincenzo Marra’s THE ADMINISTRATOR, a microcosmic look at Naples through the activities of an apartment building manager and the tenants he deals with; Jan Soldat’s THE INCOMPLETE, about a 60-year-old gay German man who embraces his desire to become a slave; Vincent Dieutre’s ROLAND WOUNDED, an exploration of modern Sicily through the conceit of a number of abandoned theatre puppets; and Gustavo Fontán’s THE FACE, an experimental film following an Argentine back to the island where he was born.

from the depthsRome’s documentary slate also includes a national cinema sidebar, Prospettiva Doc Italia, which features nine features. Among these are: Elisa Amoruso’s OFF ROAD, about the relationship between a MTF racing champion and the Romanian nurse she marries; Valentina Pedicini’s FROM THE DEPTHS (pictured), an exploration of the life of Italy’s only female miner, filmed entirely underground; Romano Montesarchio’s RITRATTI ABUSIVI, a portrait of the squatters of an Italian seaside slum that’s scheduled for redevelopment; Ermanno Cavazzoni’s SEASIDE HOLIDAYS, a playful anthropological chronicle of Italian summer via home movie footage; Marco Antonio Pani and Paolo Carboni’s HEADS AND TAILS, THE REASONS OF THE SHEPHERDS, a profile of the shepherds of Sardinia, who have had to protest in recent years to negotiate fair prices for their work; and Roberto Naccari and Stefano Bisulli’s THE OTHER FELLINI, an investigation into the famous director’s not-so-famous filmmaking brother.

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