Category Archives: Film

Visions du Réel 2016 Overview

logo_VDR_typo_carreSwitzerland’s Visions du Réel holds its 47th annual edition beginning tomorrow, Friday, April 15 through Sunday, April 23. The Nyon-based documentary event will screen nearly 100 new and recent features in addition to retrospective and shorts programming. Highlights from various sections are noted below: Continue reading

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In Theatres: ABOVE AND BELOW

ABOVEANDBELOW-KEYComing to theatres tomorrow, Friday, April 15: ABOVE AND BELOW

Nicolas Steiner’s look at survival outside mainstream society had its world premiere at Rotterdam last year. Screenings also include DOC NYC, Hot Docs, BAFICI, Docs Against Gravity, Edinburgh, Karlovy Vary, Vancouver, CPH:DOX, DocPoint, Big Sky, and Cucalorus.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Nicolas Steiner’s sublime exploration of lives lived on the fringe is set in a seemingly apocalyptic world that happens to be our own. Living above ground, April dons a spacesuit to simulate life on Mars as part of a remote science program in Utah, while Dave has left modern society for an abandoned military bunker in the California desert. Meanwhile, finding shelter below, in Las Vegas storm drains, are Lalo, Rick and Cindy, who contend with frequent, dangerous flooding to survive on their own terms.

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On VOD: 20 YEARS OF MADNESS

20_years_of_madness_stillNew to VOD this week: 20 YEARS OF MADNESS

Jeremy Royce’s look at the reunion of a 1990s public access television troupe had its world premiere at Slamdance last year. Its fest circuit also included Traverse City, Cleveland, Brooklyn, Boston Underground, Portland, Cinedelphia, and San Francisco Doc, among others. Gravitas now releases the doc on VOD.

Two decades ago, a group of smalltown Michigan misfits celebrated their weirdness in the form of 30 MINUTES OF MADNESS, a fourteen-episode public television sketch series that was something of a precursor to JACKASS and Tom Green’s style of chaotic revelry. After interpersonal conflicts brought an end to not only the show, but to the friendships that made the creative collaboration possible, MADNESS’ ambitious co-creator, Jerry White Jr left for Hollywood, but struggled to make it in the business, only graduating from a film program at USC as the doc opens on the eve of his twenty year high school reunion. It’s there that he reconnects with the show’s other co-creator and erstwhile best friend, Joe Hornacek, and the two off-handedly muse about getting the old gang together to tape a final episode – since it seems no one else has left their hometown. While some of their cast is a bit worse for wear, struggling with addiction and psychological problems, they nevertheless seem game to let loose for a bit, shaking up their ordinary, middle-aged lives with a return to the follies of their youth. At the same time, neither they nor Jerry are able to avoid the selfsame pitfalls that tarnished the program in the past, threatening the possibility that the final episode might not be completed. Royce finds unexpected poignancy not only in the various players’ stories, but in the impact and import they ascribe to their long ago participation in what, from the outside, seems like a silly diversion, but which now stands as a nostalgic symbol of unrealized youthful dreams and creativity.

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On VOD: FORCED PERSPECTIVE

forcedperspectivejpg-15f6c1d896df9b7cNew to VOD this week: FORCED PERSPECTIVE

Nick Cavalier’s portrait of artist Derek Hess made its debut at the Cleveland International Film Festival last year. Screenings followed at Beverly Hills and the Atlanta Doc fests, among others. FilmBuff now releases the film on VOD.

While not a household name, the Cleveland-based Hess has cultivated a cult following while also being recognized by the more mainstream art world and media outlets. Cavalier traces the artist’s background and career, spotlighting the eye-catching promotional music poster art that established him in the 1990s before he crossed over into fine art, and which laid the groundwork for Hess’ forays into music and art festivals and a popular line of clothing merchandise featuring his designs. The well-shot film also reveals the impact bipolar disorder and alcoholism has had on Hess’ life and work in the past, bringing a darker element to the proceedings that helps contextualize and inform his artwork, and allows Cavalier to expand his project from what’s otherwise a respectful, if somewhat insular, tribute.

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On TV: REVERSING THE MISSISSIPPI

ReversingtheMississippi_2Coming to PBS’s America ReFramed tonight, Tuesday, April 12: REVERSING THE MISSISSIPPI

Ian Midgley’s look at the meeting of two innovators made its debut at the New Orleans Film Festival this past Fall. The film has also screened at Austria’s Crossroads, UnionDocs, and Palm Springs’ American Doc fests.

Marcin Jakubowski has a disruptive idea: His Open Source Ecology has developed blueprints for farm equipment and has made them free for anyone to use to build their own. In this way, he hopes to help individuals interested in sustainability bypass the high financial bar for entry into farming, and he’s attracted a cadre of volunteers to the Factor E Farm in Missouri to assist the development of his plan. Meanwhile, in New Orleans, Nat Turner, a former NYC school teacher, relocated to the Lower 9th Ward after Katrina to open Our School at Blair Grocery, a community center that serves a sanctuary to youth, empowering them to grow and sell their own vegetables. Both men are beset by problems as they try in their own way to change the world – Jakubowski’s lack of interpersonal skills leads to a disgruntled team that threatens to abandon his dream, while Turner struggles with a lack of financial and technological resources to keep his endeavor in operation. When these two men meet, they see the potential that that their collaboration can be stronger than their individual efforts. Enabling their intersection, Midgely offers an intimate look at the highs and lows that result as they attempt the seemingly impossible.

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In Theatres: CLASS DIVIDE

CLASSDIVIDE_KEYComing to theatres tomorrow, Wednesday, April 13: CLASS DIVIDE

Marc Levin’s exploration of a changing neighborhood made its debut at the Hamptons last year. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, where it won the Metropolis competition. The film has also screened at Havana’s International Festival of New Latin American Cinema, and will be broadcast on HBO in the Fall.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
A look at NYC’s gentrification and growing inequality in a microcosm, Levin’s film explores two distinct worlds that share the same Chelsea intersection – 10th Avenue and 26th Street. On one side of the avenue, the Chelsea-Elliot Houses have provided low-income public housing to residents for decades. Their neighbor across the avenue since 2012 is Avenues: The World School, a costly private school. What happens when kids from both of these worlds attempt to cross the divide?

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Tribeca 2016: Documentary Overview

tribeca 2016The 15th annual Tribeca Film Festival begins this Wednesday, April 13, kicking off with an opening night screening of Andrew Rossi’s FIRST MONDAY IN MAY, a behind-the-scenes look at the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Gala. By the time the event wraps on Sunday, April 24, the festival will have showcased nearly 60 additional nonfiction features, including fellow Gala title THE BOMB, Kevin Ford, Smriti Keshari, and Eric Schlosser’s immersive 360 degree meditation on nuclear weapons, and other highlights noted below: Continue reading

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Special Screening: SHINJUKU BOYS

Shinjuku_BoysComing to NYC’s Q/A/F series tonight, Monday, April 11: SHINJUKU BOYS

Kim Longinotto and Jano Williams’ portrait of three biological Japanese women living as men debuted at IDFA in 1995. In its initial festival circuit, the doc appeared at NewFest, Frameline, Outfest, Chicago, and Houston, among others, winning several awards.

Longinotto and Williams profile onnabes Gaish, Tatsu, and Kazuki, who all work as hosts at the New Marilyn Club, a hotspot catering to women located in Tokyo’s Shinjuku ward. Dressed in natty suits – no doubt the height of mid-1990s Japanese fashion – with slicked back hair, the flirtatious boys have many admirers who seek an alternative to the men they typically meet – at least temporarily. Outside the club, the boys have their own relationships as they carefully negotiate gender and sex at a time when the term “transgender” was barely recognized in the mainstream queer community, much less within the general public. The film remains as fascinating now as it was upon its release, capturing the swagger – and vulnerability – of the onnabes and their intriguing milieu within a culturally specific environment not known to most Westerners. One only wishes Longinotto and Williams had been able to expand the project beyond its television broadcast length to delve even deeper into the boys’ stories.

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Special Screening: THE ARMOR OF LIGHT

armoroflightComing to JCC Manhattan CineMatters series tomorrow, Tuesday, April 12: THE ARMOR OF LIGHT

Abigail Disney’s look at the intersection of pro-life and gun rights beliefs made its world premiere at Tribeca last year. The doc went on to screen at Traverse City, AFI Docs, Hamptons, Galway, Montclair, Milwaukee, St Louis, Heartland, Oxford, and SF Jewish fests, among other events.

I previously wrote about the film here.

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In Theatres & On VOD: HAVANA MOTOR CLUB

havana motorComing to theatres and to VOD today, Friday, April 8: HAVANA MOTOR CLUB

Bent-Jorgen Perlmutt’s look at an underground car race in Cuba debuted at Tribeca last year. Screenings followed at New Orleans, Mill Valley, Milwaukee, Heartland, and Havana, among other events. In addition to a limited theatrical release, the doc also comes to iTunes.

Although the Cuban government long ago outlawed car racing as a dangerous and elitist activity, a scrappy group of enthusiasts have slyly defied official bans, holding underground drag races with their refitted vintage 1950s vehicles, a very visible, anachronistic reminder of the long-held sanctions that were still in place when Perlmutt began this project. The director identifies several subjects – perhaps one or two too many to allow for deeper individuation – who are hopeful about the possibility of participating in the first state-sanctioned race since 1959. When a Papal visit forces the race to be suspended for safety reasons, these men once again find their dreams stuck in limbo. Beyond its specific appeal to those already enamored with car culture, Perlmutt’s film offers broader audiences a unique look at Cuba and its relationship with the outside world, particularly its complicated connection to the US, through the dreams of its hopeful racers as they try to legitimize a beloved, long-illicit, activity.

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