Category Archives: Film

Sundance 2016: Competition & NEXT Lineups Announced

sundance 2016As the 2016 Sundance Film Festival lineup is revealed, I’ll be including pointers here. The US and World Cinema Dramatic and Documentary Competitions, plus the NEXT section, were announced today here.

The previously announced Midnight section may be found here. Pointers for other sections will follow as they are announced over the next week.

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In Theatres: HITCHCOCK/TRUFFAUT

HITCHCOCKTRUFFAUT-KEYComing to theatres today, Wednesday, December 2: HITCHCOCK/TRUFFAUT

Kent Jones’ look at the meeting of cinematic minds had its world premiere at Cannes earlier this year. Fest berths followed at DOC NYC, Telluride, Deauvlle, Toronto, San Sebastian, London, Mill Valley, Tallgrass, Chicago, AFI Fest, Tallinn Black Nights, and Denver, among others.

Over the course of a week in 1962, French film critic turned filmmaker François Truffaut conducted an extensive interview with one of his cinematic idols, Alfred Hitchcock, with the stated aim to demonstrate that the so-called “Master of Suspense” was also the greatest filmmaker in the world, not just some cheap entertainer. The resultant book, published in 1966, which came to be known by the shorthand title HITCHCOCK/TRUFFAUT, made a compelling argument for the British director’s body of work, and has become a classic of film studies, and, as indicated by the participants in Kent Jones’ tribute here, a seminal text for some of today’s master filmmakers, from Martin Scorsese, David Fincher, and Richard Linklater, to Olivier Assayas, Arnaud Desplechin, and Kiyoshi Kurosawa. While offering just enough background on both Hitchcock and Truffaut’s lives and careers up to the point of their legendary interview, Jones generally keeps the focus, like Truffaut’s book does, on Hitchcock’s films. Not an adaptation, and thus not interested in covering each title in his oeuvre, the well-crafted documentary instead continues in the spirit of the book, offering a literate, enthusiastic appreciation of Hitchcock’s timeless classics and of his approach to filmmaking, to inspire a new generation to discover the work and to remind those already Hitch’s fans to revisit old favorites.

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In Theatres: SOUND OF REDEMPTION: THE FRANK MORGAN STORY

redemptionComing to theatres today, Wednesday, December 2: SOUND OF REDEMPTION: THE FRANK MORGAN STORY

NC Heikin’s story of a jazzman’s fall and rise bowed at the Los Angeles Film Festival last year. It has also screened at Hot Springs Doc, Palm Springs, Virginia, Vancouver, Atlanta, and the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Sound + Vision fests.

After seeing Charlie Parker play, seven-year-old Frank Morgan – the son of musician Stanley Morgan of the Ink Spots – was bitten by the jazz bug. Within a few years, he was acclaimed as a sax prodigy, and began touring in the late 1940s as a teenager for the likes of Billie Holiday. As a young African-American man attempting to come up at a time of overt racism and segregation, many opportunities were blocked for Morgan, precipitating desperate decisions and setting him off on a path of heroin addiction and crime that would see him incarcerated for the greater part of three decades. But, as signaled by Heikin’s film title, his fall wasn’t Morgan’s end, with prison offering the surprising possibility for music to help him get clean and refocus via the prison band, the San Quentin All Stars. Once released, he continued on the straight and narrow, recording a long-overdue second album, performing, and speaking out against drugs and crime. This often-familiar redemption trajectory is creatively, if somewhat awkwardly, set against a 2012 tribute concert at San Quentin, celebrating Morgan’s life and music five years after his death, with a surfeit of talking heads offering insight into the compelling performer’s story.

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On DVD: DENNIS RODMAN’S BIG BANG IN PYONGYANG

rodmanNew to DVD this week: DENNIS RODMAN’S BIG BANG IN PYONGYANG

Colin Offland’s look at an attempt at basketball diplomacy made its premiere at Slamdance this year. It also screened at the Dublin, NYC African Diaspora, and East End fests.

Offland documents the unlikely, controversial decision by former NBA star Dennis Rodman to set up an exhibition basketball game with other pro veterans to face off against a team in North Korea, partly in celebration of his friend Kim Jong-un, a big basketball fan, and partly in some half-cocked idea of thawing international relations through sports a la Nixon-era ping pong diplomacy in China. While the film does a pretty efficient job of providing Modern Korean History 101 lessons for context, and gleefully embraces the absurdity of the non-conformist exemplar somehow serving as an unofficial American ambassador to a nation of enforced conformity, the project, as a whole, is unfortunately cringeworthy, a tone established from the outset with its incessant, cheeky Irish narration. Beyond this irksome device, neither Rodman nor his team bother to entertain the idea that they might just be part of a propaganda exercise, and instead offer soundbites about loving North Korea and it not being as bad as the media says it is – apparently naively believing they’re being given an uncensored experience during their visit. Worse than this, however, is the trainwreck that is Rodman, who responds to the criticism over the trip by succumbing to old addictions, frequently getting drunk and screaming inarticulate nonsense at inopportune moments such as an official dinner or a US news interview. While his more media-savvy teammates try to deflect politically-oriented questions, even denying that the exhibition game is in any way a birthday present to North Korea’s dictator, Rodman can’t help but put his foot in his mouth several times, undercutting the supposedly politics-free nature of this ill-fated cultural exchange. It’s a bizarre premise, not well-executed enough to be either entertaining or informative.

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On DVD: THE IMMORTALISTS

immortalistsNew to DVD this week: THE IMMORTALISTS

David Alvarado and Jason Sussberg’s profile of eccentric anti-mortality researchers debuted at SXSW last year. Other festival engagements followed at Hot Docs, Mill Valley, Philadelphia, Portland, London, Denver, and Sydney Underground.

I previously wrote about the doc upon its theatrical release here.

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88th Oscars: Best Documentary Feature Shortlist Announced

what happened miss simoneThe Best Documentary Feature Oscar shortlist has been announced – congratulations to all the filmmakers who have been recognized! As always, it’s especially great to see so many Sundance and DOC NYC alumni represented here.

I’ve previously written about most of these and hope to cover the remainder before the final nominees are announced on January 14. For now, here is the official shortlist, with links to my previous coverage:

3 1/2 MINUTES, TEN BULLETS

AMY

BEST OF ENEMIES

CARTEL LAND

GOING CLEAR

HE NAMED ME MALALA

HEART OF A DOG

THE HUNTING GROUND

LISTEN TO ME MARLON

THE LOOK OF SILENCE

MERU

WE COME AS FRIENDS

WHAT HAPPENED, MISS SIMONE?

WHERE TO INVADE NEXT

WINTER ON FIRE

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On DVD: NATURAL RESISTANCE

natural resistanceComing to DVD today, Tuesday, December 1: NATURAL RESISTANCE

Jonathan Nossiter’s look at artisanal Italian vintners struggling against conformity bowed at Berlin last year. The film also screened at Toronto, CPH:DOX, BAFICI, Athens, Docs Against Gravity, Montreal, Beirut, Rio, Seattle, Miami, and Santa Barbara, among others.

A companion piece to Nossiter’s better-known MONDOVINO, his new film is less sprawling, focused on four winemakers in two Italian regions, but covers similar general terrain as the earlier film: the impact of globalization and corporate culture on the craft of wine production. Here, the concerns are stated primarily in local terms, as so-called “natural” winemakers rail against the bureaucracy of “quality control” boards which demand a stifling uniformity to the vintages they’ll accept, ignoring the realities of weather, region, and environment and their impact on production. Couching this in a paradigm of economic control which has seen the European Union discourage farming in favor of urban development, these impassioned artisanal creators rightfully feel imperiled. Nossiter, however, employs an ambling, and at time rambling, approach – what the various clips from random classic films inserted here have to do with winemaking is a headscratcher, for example. Ultimately, this is a pleasant enough diversion, but not quite as effective as a call to action, if, in fact that is its intent.

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On DVD: AMY

AMY-KEYComing to DVD today, Tuesday, December 1: AMY

Asif Kapadia’s look at the short life and career of Amy Winehouse made its bow at Cannes this year. Since then, it has screened at DOC NYC, Edinburgh, New Zealand, Vancouver, Traverse City, Sydney, East End, Munich, Karlovy Vary, Jerusalem, Poland’s New Horizons, Sarajevo, and Biografilm, among several others.

Like his masterful feature documentary debut, SENNA, Kapadia expertly crafts his portrait of the superstar performer almost entirely through archival material, including previously unseen home movies and behind-the-scenes footage. Taking on a public figure who was obsessively covered in the mainstream media, the director offers a strikingly candid alternative perspective without sugar-coating Winehouse’s struggles with addiction and difficulty handling the pressures of celebrity. The result is an intensely human, moving reconsideration of a gifted young woman who mercilessly became dismissed as a hopeless trainwreck by tabloids and a public only too willing to indulge in schadenfreude.

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On DVD: BEING EVEL

being evelComing to DVD today, Tuesday, December 1: BEING EVEL

Daniel Junge’s exploration of the life of the daredevil showman had its world debut at Sundance this year. It went on to screen at SXSW, Miami, Cleveland, Dallas, IFF Boston, Seattle, Sydney, deadCENTER, Las Vegas, Melbourne, and New Zealand, among other events.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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On Cable: RACING EXTINCTION

racing extinctionComing to Discovery Channel worldwide tomorrow, Wednesday, December 2: RACING EXTINCTION

Louie Psihoyos’ call to prevent mass extinction had its world premiere at Sundance this year. It went on to screen at Nantucket, Telluride Mountainfilm, DC’s Environmental fest, Seattle, Maui, SF Green, and Boulder, among other fests. Discovery will broadcast the film in 220 international markets, notably while the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference, COP21, will be taking place in Paris.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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