Category Archives: Film

In Theatres & On VOD: CRAZY ABOUT TIFFANY’S

tiffany'sComing to theatres and to VOD today, Friday, February 19: CRAZY ABOUT TIFFANY’S

Matthew Miele’s love letter to the storied jewelry icon makes its debut in limited engagements in NYC, LA, Chicago, Cleveland, Miami, San Francisco, and other select cities. Gravitas Ventures also makes the film available on VOD across cable platforms, iTunes, YouTube, Google Play, Amazon, Vudu, Playstation, and more.

Making no claims to being a comprehensive history or social critique, Miele’s film instead unabashedly celebrates the luxury brand’s global reach and aspirational status, with the full participation of the company. As an authorized piece, the doc does it’s laudatory job well enough, touching on signature elements like Tiffany’s distinctive blue color and its instantly recognizable signature white ribboned boxes, and referencing notable pop cultural references, from BREAKFAST AT TIFFANY’S and SWEET HOME ALABAMA to the Deep Blue Something hit song that borrows its name from the Blake Edwards’ film. While a bit scattershot, pingponging from these moments to behind-the-scenes looks at jewelry design, snippets of store and Tiffany family history, episodes with Jessica Biel surveying the gems she’ll wear at the Oscars, a consideration of the international expansion of the brand, and, of course, celebrity and stylist appreciations, there are enough engaging elements here that make for an enjoyable, if very light, pop cultural tribute.

1 Comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases

ZagrebDox 2016 Overview

zagrebdox_logoCroatia’s ZagrebDox launches its 12th edition this Sunday, February 21 and runs through next Sunday, February 28. More than 160 new and retrospective features and shorts will screen as part of the event, the nation’s largest documentary showcase. While much of this includes local debuts of films that are already well-traveled on the international festival circuit, the festival also affords the opportunity to view new regional work, a sampling of which is provided below. Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations

Documentary Fortnight 2016 Overview

moma-logoTomorrow night, Friday, February 19, sees the start of the 15th anniversary edition of MoMA’s annual nonfiction showcase, Documentary Fortnight, with the NYC premiere of Billy Woodberry’s AND WHEN I DIE, I WON’T STAY DEAD, about unheralded African American Beat poet Bob Kaufman. Eighteen features and several shorts will screen before the series wraps on Monday, February 29 with the world premiere of Adam Khalil and Zack Khalil’s INNATE/SE/ [IT SHINES A CERTAIN WAY. TO A CERTAIN PLACE./IT FLIES. FALLS./], which reclaims the Ojibway story for the Native American people themselves.

Call Her Applebroog cropAlso making its world premiere is Beth B’s CALL HER APPLEBROOG (pictured), a portrait of the filmmaker’s mother, artist Ida Applebroog. North American premieres include: John Gianvito’s WAKE (SUBIC), an exploration of the damage done to the Philippines by continued US military presence; Jacques Perconte’s ETTRICK, an experimental film manipulating Scottish landscapes into abstract art images; K8 Hardy’s OUTFITUMENTARY, a portrait of the artist through a dozen year’s of personal fashion choices; and Ane Hjort Guttu’s TIME PASSES, which follows a student’s solidarity with a homeless Roma woman as part of a performance art project.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations

On TV: CAROLE KING: NATURAL WOMAN

carole kingComing to PBS’s American Masters this Friday, February 19: CAROLE KING: NATURAL WOMAN

George Scott’s portrait of the accomplished singer-songwriter makes its world premiere on the popular public television series devoted to US artists and cultural icons.

Timed to coincide with the 45th anniversary of King’s influential solo album, Tapestry, still beloved for producing such classics as “I Feel the Earth Move,” and “It’s Too Late,” Scott’s film gives the acclaimed musician her due. Interviews with the eminently likeable King herself, both present-day and archival, provide the thread through which her life and career are revealed, offering early biographical details as the young would-be teacher instead pursued a musical path. King, who partnered with lyricist Gerry Goffin, and fellow songwriters Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil reveal fascinating details about their roles in the factory songwriting process which allowed them to churn out hit songs for a revolving door of pop performers like The Shirelles and Aretha Franklin, often in the space of days if not hours. The doc importantly also details King’s evolution from behind-the-scenes creator to public performer, part of the wave of singer-songwriters that emerged in the 1970s, with numerous clips demonstrating the talent that led to four Grammy Awards, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the Kennedy Center Honors, and the Library of Congress Gershwin Prize, among other accolades, as well as the popular Broadway musical, BEAUTIFUL: THE CAROLE KING MUSICAL.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

Big Sky Documentary Film Festival 2016 Overview

big skyThis Friday, February 19 kicks off the 13th Big Sky Documentary Film Festival in Missoula MT. Running through Sunday, February 28, the state’s largest film event will present several competitions, as well as a diverse range of non-competitive sidebars on themes including native concerns, conflict resolution, nature, culture, history, adventure, local filmmaking, and retrospectives of the work of Lucy Walker and Ondi Timoner. A selection of the more than 60 new and recent feature docs is included below: Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations

On DVD: THE IRON MINISTRY

iron ministryComing to DVD today, Tuesday, February 16: THE IRON MINISTRY

JP Sniadecki’s observational profile of Chinese train travel made its world premiere at Locarno in 2014. Other screenings have included the NYFF, Rotterdam, Vancouver, Edinburgh, Camden, Chicago, DocLisboa, Viennale, CPH:DOX, RIDM, and Ambulante.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

On DVD: BONNIE & CLYDE

bonnie and clydeComing to DVD today, Tuesday, February 16: BONNIE & CLYDE

John Maggio’s look at the lives of the infamous criminal duo debuted on PBS’s American Experience last month.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

On TV: THE MOSQUE IN MORGANTOWN

ARF-TheMosqueInMorgantown_1Coming to The WORLD Channel’s America ReFramed tomorrow, Tuesday, February 16: THE MOSQUE IN MORGANTOWN

Brittany Huckabee’s look at a Muslim woman’s controversial stand against her local mosque debuted at True/False in 2009. It also screened at San Francisco Asian American, where it was awarded best documentary. The film was nominated for an Emmy after its initial public television broadcast.

Morgantown is a West Virginia college town with a small but vibrant Muslim community, largely drawn from the nearby school. The Islamic Center of Morgantown doubles as their place of worship and community hub. When Asra Nomani returns from a stint in Pakistan as a journalist for the Wall Street Journal, she believes her hometown will be the best place to raise her child. After recognizing signs of intolerance among the mosque’s more conservative leaders and prejudicial treatment of women, Asra decides to take a very visible stand, drawing media attention and criticism against supposed “extremism” in the mosque, and, in the process, precipitating a schism among its members. Huckabee deftly charts the fallout, following not only Asra in her crusade, but other members of the mosque, both allies and those alienated by her tactics, to craft a provocative exploration of the tension between tradition and progressive ideas in today’s Islam with regard to gender.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

Special Screening: TRAPPED

trappedComing to NYC’s Stranger Than Fiction series tomorrow, Tuesday, February 16: TRAPPED

Dawn Porter’s exploration of embattled abortion clinics just had its world premiere at Sundance last month. The film picked up a Special Jury Award for Social Impact Filmmaking at the festival.

My pre-Sundance profile of the doc may be found here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance

On TV: HELP US FIND SUNIL TRIPATHI

2015-Help_Us_Find_Sunil_Tripathi_1Coming to Al Jazeera America this Sunday, February 14: HELP US FIND SUNTIL TRIPATHI

Neal Broffman’s exploration of a missing man’s unexpected intersection with social media made its debut at Atlanta last year, where it won the Audience Award. It went on to screen at Hot Docs, New Orleans, DMZ Docs, Brooklyn, Boston Asian American, St Louis, Denver, and Oxford, among others.

After Sunil Tripathi, a Brown University student suffering from depression, vanished without a trace from his apartment late one night, his family is desperate to locate him. As detailed in Broffman’s sensitive retelling, they methodically spread Sunil’s story and his picture as far and wide as possible, garnering attention from traditional and social media in the hopes that someone, anyone will recognize their family member and provide a lead. Despite this initial interest, with no one coming forward, the story soon died down. While the family wished for a resurgence of interest, they were soon faced with more media coverage than they wanted when Sunil is inexplicably linked to a grainy photo of one of the Boston Marathon bombers. Through the virality of the Internet, rampant speculation on reddit soon crosses over to the mainstream media, and, despite zero official corroboration, their beloved, lost family member is declared to be a terrorist and murderer, with threats lobbed at him and his relatives from all directions. This cautionary tale demonstrates the dark side of so-called citizen journalism and Internet activism, their infiltration of traditional news, and a young man and his family who are caught in its wake.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases