Category Archives: Film

On Cable: HEROIN: CAPE COD, USA

151228-heroin-cape-cod-spoon-1920Coming to HBO tonight, Monday, December 28: HEROIN: CAPE COD, USA

Steven Okazaki’s candid profile of opiate addiction in a small community makes its debut on the cable network after preview community screenings in Boston and on the Cape.

A response to the alarming growth of cases of heroin overdose, addiction, and drug-related crimes in a community typically known as an idyllic summer vacation destination, Okazaki’s film takes an intimate look at several locals whose lives have been upended by the drug. Though the director dispenses some disturbing statistics and facts – such as the overprescription rates of opiate-based painkillers like oxycontin and their role as gateway drugs to cheaper, more easily available heroin – the strength of the film is in its frank profiling of users. These young people – reflecting the community, they are nearly all white, some seemingly fairly well-off, with supportive families – cycle through various rehab centers or sober houses on and off the Cape, struggle with recovery, and eventually relapse. Willing to appear on camera at their worst, they express frustration and pessimism as they speak openly about their inability to kick their addiction and the depths they’ve sunk to in order to support it. Occasionally during interviews, without warning, titles appear revealing updates to their stories: relapses, disappearances, and, in a few cases, deaths by overdose. While these shouldn’t be a surprise, they still pack a gutpunch, reflecting the empathy Okazaki is able to build over a relatively brief running time.

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2016 Sundance Docs in Focus: AUDRIE & DAISY

audrieMy Sundance 2016 doc profiles begin with AUDRIE & DAISY, Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk’s exploration of the dangerous combination of juvenile sexual assault and social media shaming.

Festival Section:
US Documentary Competition
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2016 Sundance Docs in Focus

sundance 2016The 32nd edition of the Sundance Film Festival will take place next month, running between January 21-31, with a lineup consisting of 133 features and 72 shorts. Since 2011, I’ve profiled the feature documentaries in the program in advance of the festival to provide information about the films and their filmmakers and to share my excitement for their upcoming premieres. I’ll begin with the first few titles in the US Documentary Competition this coming Monday, and continue film-by-film, section-by-section, to cover the approximately 50 nonfiction offerings before the festival opens.

As a Documentary Programming Associate for Sundance, please note that these profiles are not reviews – instead, they simply include select background, noting past Sundance projects where applicable, and reasons why readers should seek the films out, either in Park City during the festival or later in the year at other upcoming festivals, in theatres, TV/cable, or on DVD/VOD. For a sample, check out last year’s series, which began here.

I’ve also prepared a new Twitter list to give readers a look at the festival through the eyes of the Sundance filmmaking class of 2016.

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On TV: ASTOR BARBER ALL-STARS

astorComing to PBS this Sunday, December 27: ASTOR BARBER ALL-STARS

Karen Gehres’ ode to a NYC institution debuted at the San Francisco DocFest last year. It has also screened at the Manhattan and Rome Independent fests.

Astor Place Hairstylists has been in operation since 1939, and run by the Vezza family since 1947, expanding from a small barbershop to three bustling floors in its heyday, which witnessed lines of waiting customers directed around the store via a megaphone. While those days have passed, the mom-and-pop shop still boasts about fifty stations in its cavernous digs in a neighborhood that’s otherwise steadily been absorbed by NYU and chain stores. Known for its inexpensive haircuts, multilingual barbers, and occasional celebrity clientele, it’s an unassuming place filled with NYC history which Gehres makes an admirable attempt to cover, providing those who have frequented the place with a healthy dose of nostalgia. Incorporating low-grade video footage from the barbershop’s storied past with more recent interviews with the business’ owners, employees, and clients, the film is ultimately too rough-hewn and local to make a larger impression, but it certainly succeeds in conveying a love for the establishment and its endurance in the face of a rapidly-vanishing old-school New York.

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In Theatres: TRANSFATTY LIVES

transfattyComing to theatres this Friday, December 25: TRANSFATTY LIVES

Patrick O’Brien’s personal exploration of ALS debuted at Tribeca, where it picked up an audience award. The film also screened at Hot Docs, MIlan, DOK Leipzig, and Poland’s American Film Festival.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: WHERE TO INVADE NEXT

invadeComing to NYC and LA theatres tomorrow, Wednesday, December 23: WHERE TO INVADE NEXT

Michael Moore’s subversive invasion of other nations had its world premiere at Toronto this Fall. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, the New York Film Festival, Hamptons, Denver, AFI Fest, and Philadelphia, among other events. The film has been shortlisted for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. After this exclusive NYC and LA run, Moore will sneak peek the doc in a state-by-state tour for six weeks starting January 4 before its national rollout beginning February 12.

Moore’s latest begins with an imagined scenario in which the Joint Chiefs of Staff turn to the provocateur, offer a mea culpa for the mess they’ve made in ever war since WWII, and ask for his advice on our next international power play. As a response to this wish fulfillment, Moore agrees to take charge of America’s future invasions. The twist, of course, is that Moore imagines himself as a one-man army corps, heading into other nations to claim their best ideas for the good old US of A, and bringing along a big flag to make his claim. In Italy, he sets his sights on paid work leave; in France, on quality, nutritious school lunches; in Finland, on a revamped public school system that has parted ways with homework and standardized testing; in Slovenia, on a free university program for foreigners; in Iceland, on female leadership; and in Germany, on an honest reckoning with the country’s historical crimes. Along the way, Moore overindulges in the role of the stereotypical ignorant, ill-informed American – essentially spit-taking his way through the utopian factoids offered up here that put the US system to shame – and critics will find it ridiculously easy to point out how one-sided the director’s version of these policies are presented, since there are no dissenting voices here, nor any acknowledgement of the things that are going badly in any of the countries he’s visiting. But that’s fine – for the project that Moore has undertaken, there never is any pretense that he will offer a comprehensive overview of European sociopolitical ills. As facile as his “invasion” may seem, and as much as it’s a distinct case of preaching to the converted, the doc does underscore significant places where our own approaches are wanting and are in desperate need of an overhaul. If Moore’s “gee whiz” approach might wear a bit thin, the general optimism he pushes here is still a welcome change of pace from the more typical strident approach that has gotten to be fairly one-note in the past.

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On Cable: BOLSHOI BABYLON

bolshoi-1Coming to HBO tonight, Monday, December 21: BOLSHOI BABYLON

Director Nick Read and co-director Mark Franchetti’s look at the fallout of a ballet world scandal made its bow at Toronto this Fall. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, Hamptons, CPH:DOX, and IDFA, among other events.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: THOSE WHO FEEL THE FIRE BURNING

those_who_feel_the_fire_burning_stillComing to theatres today, Friday, December 18: THOSE WHO FEEL THE FIRE BURNING

Morgan Knibbe’s meditation on life and death in refugee limbo debuted at IDFA last year. The doc went on to screen at True/False, Thessaloniki Doc, Hot Docs, Docs Against Gravity, Sarajevo, and AFI Fest, among other events.

Knibbe brings a bold visual style to his experimental hybrid film, which offers the subjective experience of a disembodied migrant who dies in his perilous attempt to crossover into Europe. Through his imagined perspective, the viewer is presented with a multiplicity of experiences of others who made it, but who have found something far different from the promised land of their hopes: loneliness, despair, drug addiction, poverty, and frustration. Intentionally fragmented, Knibbe’s project encourages disorientation if not outright confusion – given the topic, this works both for and against it, plunging the viewer into parallel situations with its various subjects, but also often eschewing the context that could make its episodes more compelling. Traditionalists will likely find it more frustrating than successful, but the film certainly demonstrates a director with talent.

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On VOD: WELCOME TO LEITH

welcome to leithNow available on VOD: WELCOME TO LEITH

Michael Beach Nichols and Christopher K Walker’s look at a town facing a hostile takeover had its world premiere at Sundance this year. Its fest circuit also included Nantucket, SXSW, Dallas, RiverRun, Sarasota, Montclair, Sydney, AFI Docs, New Zealand, Melbourne, and Sidewalk, among others. The film is now available on iTunes.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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Sundance 2016: Additional Lineup Announcements

sundance 2016Additional lineup announcements have just been made for the 2016 Sundance Film Festival, including the From the Collection section and several new films and events, located here.

Previously announced are the US and World Cinema Documentary and Dramatic Competitions, plus NEXT; Premieres, Documentary Premieres, Spotlight, Sundance Kids, and Special Events; Midnight; the films, installations, and events of New Frontier; and the expanded Shorts lineup.

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