Category Archives: Film

In Theatres: CATCHING THE SUN

catching the sunComing to theatres today, Friday, April 1: CATCHING THE SUN

Shalini Kantayya’s look at initiatives to expand solar energy had its world premiere at the Los Angeles Film Festival last Summer. Screenings followed at Big Sky, Washington DC’s Environmental, San Francisco Green, Twin Cities, and Australia’s Transitions, among others.

Recognizing the potential in renewable energy to provide not only a means to kick oil dependence but to generate much-needed employment and revenue, initiatives have emerged in cities both at home and abroad to tap into solar power. Kantayya’s film surveys the landscape of the solar boom, both on the local level, as she explores how the city of Richmond CA turns to training programs as a means to fight high crime rates, unemployment, and the dangers of a nearby Chevron refinery; and on the global scale, as Chinese solar entrepreneur Wally Jiang dreams of expanding his successful business to other countries. Demonstrating the US government’s resistance to the adoption of sensible renewable energy policies, well-represented here by both historical precedent – President Carter’s installation of solar panels on the White House and their immediate removal when President Reagan took office – and the rise and fall of the film’s subject Van Jones – who finds himself moving from the SF Bay Area’s Green for All program to serve as President Obama’s Special Advisor on Green Jobs and instantly attacked by the rightwing – the doc instead sees hope in grassroots initiatives that change local behavior and create demand among the people that will prove harder and harder to ignore.

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In Theatres: GAYBY BABY

GAYBYBABY-KEYComing to theatres today, Friday, April 1: GAYBY BABY

Maya Newell’s portrait of LGBT families debuted at Hot Docs last year. The film went on to screen at DOC NYC, London, Melbourne, Sydney, Documentary Edge, Warsaw, and DOK Leipzig, among other fests.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Gus is obsessed with wrestling, perhaps disturbingly so. Ebony is nervous about nailing her audition to a performing arts school. Matt, raised with religion, is flirting with atheism. Graham has to contend with his difficulties reading and a family move to Fiji. They’re all very different preteens, but they have one thing in common – they have same-sex parents. Maya Newell’s beautifully composed film reveals both the challenges of same-sex parenting and the refreshing commonalities shared by every family.

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In Theatres: NOTFILM

notfilm-image-beckettComing to theatres tomorrow, Friday, April 1: NOTFILM

Ross Lipman’s comprehensive exploration of Samuel Beckett’s only film made its bow at BFI London last year. Other engagements have included CPH:DOX, Rotterdam, Hong Kong, Dublin, the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Film Comment Selects series, and BAFICI.

Presented in conjunction with screenings of FILM, the twenty-minute short Beckett wrote starring Buster Keaton which was directed by Alan Schneider in 1965, Lipman’s ambitious, sprawling essay takes a deep dive into all aspects of that divisive project, from its origins to its legacy among Beckettian scholars and cinephiles. Approaching Beckett’s cinematic foray as a fundamental chase film, the story of “O,” or Object, portrayed by Keaton, as he tries to evade “E,” or Eye, the camera, Lipman contextualizes FILM within the larger bodies of work of Beckett, Keaton, and even Grove Press’ Barney Rosset, who commissioned and produced the project as one segment of a proposed but aborted three-part series made by notable writers under his imprint. Clocking in at over two hours, Lipman’s film is often demanding, drawing from his expertise as a film preservationist and restorer at the UCLA Film and Television Archive. Perhaps recognizing the probable self-selecting nature of its likely audience, the film takes as a given a general familiarity of the work and life of the visionary Irish author, and at times strays too far down an associative path to contemplate only tangentially-related theatre pieces. This free association yields more satisfying dialogue on the film side, with clips from Eisenstein, Vertov, Buñuel, Chaplin, and, of course, Keaton, while more conventional behind-the-scenes stories about the production lend a welcome insight, as do newly rediscovered audio recordings made by Rosset of conversations with Beckett explicating his script. Even if FILM remains an esoteric curiosity, Lipman’s analysis serves as a thoughtful, and appreciative, work of scholarship.

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In Theatres: FRANCOFONIA

francofoniaComing to theatres tomorrow, Friday, April 1: FRANCOFONIA

Alexander Sokurov’s hybrid meditation on art through the lens of a Nazi-controlled Louvre made its debut at Venice last year, where it won two awards. The film went on to screen at Toronto, London, San Sebastian, Thessaloniki, Reykjavik, Haifa, and Vancouver, among several other events.

Resistant to easy classification, Sokurov’s latest combines elements of essay film, archival documentary, and fiction to explore the intersections of culture, history, and politics through the museum. While the bulk of the film is concerned with the Louvre under the Nazi Occupation, and focuses on the complex relationship between museum director Jacques Jaujard and Nazi Kunstschutz officer Franzikus Wolff-Metternich – portrayed by actors here – Sokurov expands beyond a conventional fictional retelling, inserting his authorial voice via a running essay commentary and, far less successfully, aborted Skype communications with a sea captain transporting valuable works of art in a storm and intermittent explorations of the museum’s holdings via the spirits of Napoleon and Marianne, the female representation of the nation of France, who just repeats “Liberté, égalité, fraternité.” If these esoteric trappings don’t quite cohere, the director, allowed seemingly unfettered access to the museum, nevertheless captures the Louvre – and a particularly fraught period in its history – from a decidedly unique perspective, making for an often engaging curio.

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In Theatres: TITICUT FOLLIES

titicut-folliesComing to NYC’s Metrograph for a week run as part of its Three Wiseman series this Friday, April 1: TITICUT FOLLIES

Frederick Wiseman’s controversial study of a Massachusetts prison asylum had its world premiere at the New York Film Festival in 1967. The documentary faced legal challenges by the state almost immediately, which successfully prevented its general release until 1991, though it did initially screen in European fests including Mannheim-Heidelberg and Florence’s Festival Dei Popoli in 1967. This newly restored print entered the festival circuit at Toronto last year.

Wiseman’s debut film fittingly began his interest in documenting institutions, in this case the State Prison for the Criminally Insane at Bridgewater. Borrowing its title from the name of the disturbing musical talent show foisted upon the inmates which bookends the film, this observational portrait unflinchingly reveals the horrific treatment and lack of empathy that existed in this setting. While individuals or their diagnoses are rarely identified, their lack of differentiation underscores the inadequacies and abuses of their care by prison and hospital officials. Neglected when they’re not being actively ridiculed or maltreated, these men seem destined to wither away, hopeless, as Wiseman’s camera, and, by extension, the audience, bear witness to their suffering.

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On VOD: BIKES VS CARS

bikesNew to iTunes this week: BIKES VS CARS

Fredrik Gertten’s exploration of the environmental impact of personal transportation premiered at Tempo Documentary Festival last year. Screenings followed at SXSW, Docs Against Gravity, Sydney, Melbourne, Transilvania, Big Sky, Sedona, SF Green, and DC’s Environmental fest. While the film has previously been available on Vimeo on Demand, Kino Lorber now expands its VOD to include iTunes.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD: CODEGIRL

la-et-codegirl-movie-review-20151101-001New to DVD this week: CODEGIRL

Lesley Chilcott’s look at a competition that encourages teenage girls to enter the tech space premiered at CPH:DOX last year. The doc has also screened at Athena and the Los Angeles Women’s International fests.

Noting the lack of women in the otherwise burgeoning tech field, the Technovation Challenge aims to kickstart girls’ involvement, ultimately awarding a $10,000 prize to a winning smartphone app pitch developed by teams of high school girls around the world. Chilcott follows a number of teams as they prepare their entries, which are meant to focus on identifying and solving local problems via technology, and learn of their standing in the overall competition. Once a team fails to advance, the film moves on to profile a new set of contenders from scratch, ultimately resulting in an oddly cursory sense of eleven teams and their hit-or-miss projects, and very little individuation for its members. In contrast to other films in the competition doc sub-genre, the focus seems less about who wins and more about the empowerment gained through involvement in Technovation. Still, what’s missing is a personal or driving force to the narrative, aside from the mechanics of the challenge process. The audience doesn’t have a chance to connect with any particular team or individual personality, making the presentations by the finalists drag, and the announcement of the winning group lack impact.

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In Theatres & On VOD: SEX AND BROADCASTING: A FILM ABOUT WFMU

sexComing to theatres and to VOD today, Wednesday, March 30: SEX AND BROADCASTING: A FILM ABOUT WFMU

Tim K Smith’s portrait of a maverick radio station had its world premiere at DOC NYC in 2014. The doc went on to screen at Rotterdam, Salem, and Montclair, among other events. In addition to its limited theatrical release, the film now also becomes available on Vimeo on Demand.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
New Jersey’s WFMU has occupied a unique position as an independent, commercial-free, listener-supported radio station since its inception in the late 1950s. At its heart is the dedicated station manager Ken Freedman, committed to an unstructured, free-form broadcasting model which has won WFMU acclaim as the best – and perhaps weirdest – radio station in the tristate area, if not the country. Facing a budget crisis, can Ken rally both his volunteer staff and his listeners to keep the station afloat?

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On VOD: THANK YOU FOR PLAYING

thank_you_for_playing_stillComing to VOD today, Tuesday, March 29: THANK YOU FOR PLAYING

David Osit and Malika Zouhali-Worrall’s chronicle of creativity in the face of mortality debuted at Tribeca last year. The film’s fest circuit also included New Orleans, Hot Docs, IDFA, Bentonville, Woods Hole, Melbourne, Camden, Antenna, United Nations Association, and Rio. FilmBuff now releases the doc on VOD platforms following a limited theatrical release earlier this month.

I previously wrote about the film here.

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On DVD: A POEM IS A NAKED PERSON

poem is a naked personComing to DVD today, Tuesday, March 29: A POEM IS A NAKED PERSON

Les Blank’s long unreleased 1974 Leon Russell film finally made its debut at SXSW last year. The film went on to screen at AFI Docs, BAMcinemaFest, New Zealand, Melbourne, IDFA, London, and Goteborg, in addition to a theatrical release this past Summer.

I previously wrote about the doc upon its release here.

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