Category Archives: Film

On VOD: BEST OF ENEMIES

best of enemiesComing to Netflix this Saturday, November 28: BEST OF ENEMIES

Morgan Neville and Robert Gordon’s look back at the infamous Buckley/Vidal debates debuted at Sundance this year. Other fest berths have included DOC NYC, Nantucket, BAMcinemaFest, AFI Docs, Outfest, San Francisco, SXSW, Hot Docs, Full Frame, Srasota, Miami, and IFF Boston, among others. The film was released on several VOD platforms earlier this month, and now comes to Netflix.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

Leave a comment

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

In Theatres & On VOD: KILLING THEM SAFELY

KillingThemSafelyComing to theatres and VOD this Friday, November 27: KILLING THEM SAFELY

Nick Berardini’s exposé on the ethics of Taser use in law enforcement made its debut at Tribeca under its earlier title, TOM SWIFT AND HIS ELECTRIC RIFLE. Screenings have followed at Hot Docs, Tallgrass, and St Louis, among others events.

In the early 1990s, brothers Rick and Tom Smith, inspired by the needless deaths of high school friends in a road rage incident, sought out safer alternatives to conventional firearms. They found the Taser, an electroshock device invented in the late 1960s-early 1970s by Jack Cover, a NASA researcher which had proven too weak to properly incapacitate assailants. Through further development, the Smiths managed to make the device effective by upping the voltage, and their enterprise, Taser International, began marketing it to law enforcement around the country as a non-lethal alternative firearm, and providing training and assurances that the Taser was perfectly safe. Berardini’s surprisingly even-handed film, however, exposes cracks in these claims, focusing on a series of cases in which individuals who were tased ended up dying. As disturbing as surveillance footage capturing several of these deadly incidents is, even more troubling is the evasiveness of the brothers Smith, as revealed in deposition recordings. Latching on to any flimsy excuse or half-baked theory, they are dogged in their refusal to admit the danger their tinkering with the device has yielded in the name of profits. While the film also notes that the trigger-happy, poorly-trained police departments that too quickly added the Taser to the arsenal certainly share in the blame, it finds its true culprits in the corporate malfeasance of Taser International’s denial of reality.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

On DVD: ONE ROGUE REPORTER

one rougeNew to DVD this week: ONE ROGUE REPORTER

Rich Peppiatt and Tom Jenkinson’s condemnation of sensationalistic journalism premiered at Sheffield in 2013. Other screenings included the Leeds and East End fests, in addition to other British events, before its VOD release last Winter.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases

On DVD: THE SQUARE

squareComing to DVD today, Tuesday, November 24: THE SQUARE (AL MIDAN)

Jehane Noujaim’s immersive look at the Egyptian revolution premiered at Sundance in 2013, where it won an audience award. A revised version made its way to Toronto, winning another audience award win, before screening at the New York Film Festival, DOC NYC, and Dubai, among others, before it was nominated for the Best Documentary Feature Academy Award.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

Leave a comment

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

On DVD: 1971

1971Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, November 24: 1971

Johanna Hamilton’s exploration of a revealing FBI break-in premiered at Tribeca last year. Its fest circuit also included IDFA, Sheffield, AFI Docs, Traverse City, and CPH:DOX, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

On DVD: THE NEW RIJKSMUSEUM

la-et-mn-new-rijksmuseum-review-20150619-001Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, November 24: THE NEW RIJKSMUSEUM

Oeke Hoogendijk’s behind-the-scenes look at the decade-long renovation of Amsterdam’s most notable art attraction had its world premiere on Dutch television in 2013, with a substantially shortened theatrical version making its debut at NYC’s Film Forum earlier this year. Other fest screenings have included IDFA, Biografilm, Jerusalem, and Hong Kong.

In 2004, the Rijksmuseum was closed to the public in anticipation of a four-year renovation to update the institution for the 21st century and solidify its importance for the Netherlands’ international cultural tourism. As Hoogendijk’s primarily observational epic demonstrates, things didn’t go exactly to plan. Instead, four years ballooned to nearly ten, and the museum didn’t reopen until April 2013. During this fallow period, the Rijksmuseum lost its director, shown halfway through this chronicle; struggled with a surprisingly strong pro-bicyclist lobby that necessitated major architectural redesigns; tried to develop its 20th century collection with some questionable acquisitions; and ran up its budget far beyond projected estimates. While the film at times seems to revel in a schadenfreude of sorts as the renovation faces all manner of absurd bureaucratic hurdles, it’s clear that the director’s focus on numerous dedicated employees – most notably curators and restorers – demonstrates a deep and abiding respect and love for what the institution is meant to celebrate. Even if the final scene fails properly to showcase the completed museum in enough detail, there remains a distinct sense of satisfaction that its staff – and the audience – have finally seen the project to its end.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

On DVD: RED LINES

Red_Lines_3-620x350Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, November 24: RED LINES

Andrea Kalin and Oliver Lukacs’ on-the-ground look at the conflict in Syria debuted at Hot Docs last year. It has gone on to screen at events in Oslo, Washington DC, London, Haifa, and Little Rock, as well as at fests such as Budapest, Woodstock, United Nations Association, Docs DF, Cucalorus, DocAviv, DocuWest, and One World, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

On DVD: THE STORM MAKERS

stormComing to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, November 24: THE STORM MAKERS

Guillaume Suon’s investigation into human trafficking in Cambodia premiered at Busan last year. The film went on to screen at IDFA, Thessaloniki Doc, Movies That Matter, Full Frame, DOK.fest Munich, Docs Against Gravity, Sheffield, and AFI Docs, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

Special Screening: DANNY SAYS

danny saysComing to NYC’s Stranger Than Fiction series tomorrow, Tuesday, November 24: DANNY SAYS

Brendan Toller’s portrait of a man behind legendary music acts debuted at SXSW earlier this year. It has also screened at BFI London, San Francisco Jewish, Provincetown, Sound + Vision, Big Sky, Montclair, Melbourne, CPH:DOX, and Athens, among other events.

Already immortalized by the Ramones’ song that lends this film its title, Danny Fields (born Feinberg) is the latest in a string of most famous background people the general public has never heard of, much like Shep Gordon, the subject of SUPERMENSCH. Like that music world impresario, Fields had a hand in the careers of an unexpectedly diverse range of superstar performers in the 1960s-1970s, from the Beatles to Lou Reed, the Doors to Iggy Pop, and, of course, the Ramones. Taking on roles such as music magazine editor, press agent, Elektra executive, and band manager, the brash New Yorker – openly gay before it was socially acceptable – always seemed to be in the right place at the right time, at least for a time, but never long enough to make out financially for his prescient tastes. Toller tells a likeable, energetic tale rife with anecdotes, though limited in its scope to the decades noted above.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations

On TV: MIMI AND DONA

mimi_and_dona-01Coming to PBS’s Independent Lens tonight, Monday, November 23: MIMI AND DONA

Sophie Sartain’s portrait of a mother and daughter debuted at the Dallas VideoFest last year. It also screened at Thin Line, Sebastopol Doc, ReelAbilities, and several community screenings around the country.

Sartain’s film explores the relationship between her maternal grandmother Mimi, 92, and her intellectually-disabled aunt Dona, 64, as they reckon with the latter’s difficult transition out of the home she’s known her entire life into an assisted care facility. Exploring not only the complex bonds between these two women, but also her mother’s own complicated history with her mother and sister, the director creates a portrait of interdependence that also ends up being informed by other family members’ experiences with autism – including the filmmaker’s own concerns about her young son. While on the whole technically rough, Sartain manages to capture a poignant sense of the impact of separation on both mother and daughter.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases