Category Archives: Film

On DVD: SEEDS OF TIME

seeds of timeComing to DVD today, Tuesday, October 20: SEEDS OF TIME

Sandy McLeod’s look at efforts to preserve biodiversity had its world premiere at SXSW last year. It has also screened at Berlin, CPH:DOX, Full Frame, Seattle, and environmental fests in San Francisco and Washington DC, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On VOD: ONE CUT, ONE LIFE

onecutonelifeblogphotoComing to VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, October 20: ONE CUT, ONE LIFE

Lucia Small and Ed Pincus’ collaborative exploration of mortality had its world premiere at Full Frame last year. It went on to screen at IFF Boston, Woods Hole, Torino, and the New York Film Festival, among others. The doc now comes to VOD via iTunes.

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

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Special Screening: THE WANTED 18

TheWanted18-2_720_405_90Coming to NYC’s Stranger Than Fiction series tomorrow, Tuesday, October 20: THE WANTED 18

Amer Shomali and Paul Cowan’s look back at Israel’s crackdown on a herd of cows had its premiere at Toronto last year. It also screened at Abu Dhabi, Tallinn Black Nights, Thessaloniki Doc, and the Human Rights Watch fest, among others. The film is Palestine’s entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the Academy Awards.

I previously wrote about the film here.

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On DVD: THE WOLFPACK

wolfpackComing to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, October 20: THE WOLFPACK

Crystal Moselle’s exploration of a family’s unusual upbringing had its world premiere at Sundance this year, where it won the US Documentary Grand Jury Prize. It went on to Nantucket, Cleveland, Full Frame, Sarasota, Tribeca, San Francisco, and Seattle. The film will screen as part of DOC NYC’s Short List next month.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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In Theatres: ALL THINGS MUST PASS

allthingsmustpassComing to theatres today, Friday, October 16: ALL THINGS MUST PASS

Colin Hanks’ tribute to Tower Records had its world premiere at SXSW this Spring. It went on to screen at Seattle, AFI Docs, Sacramento, and Greenwich, among other events.

Opening by revealing that the retail giant made over a billion dollars just five years before it filed for bankruptcy, Hanks sets the stage for a rise and fall trajectory that will be of no surprise to anyone old enough to fondly remember a time when you couldn’t buy (or otherwise “find”) new music online. While the film indulges in a largely anecdote-driven history, delivered by Tower Records founder Russ Solomon and a large circle of past store clerks-turned-management, the history revealed here does double duty as that of the larger music industry and its shortsightedness in response to Napster and the digital music revolution. Focusing on the growth, mistakes, and eventual demise of Tower, and, significantly, the group of eccentrics that called the company home for nearly forty years, Hanks humanizes the faceless, corporate industry, and instead offers an intimate, and often quite poignant, reflection of a vastly different, if only relatively recently departed, era.

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In Theatres: FIELD NIGGAS

fieldComing to NYC’s IFP Screen Forward series for a one-week run beginning today, Friday, October 16: FIELD NIGGAS

Khalik Allah’s slice of Harlem street life had its debut at True/False earlier this year. It has also screened at Sarasota, Maryland, and FID Marseille.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: TAB HUNTER CONFIDENTIAL

tabhunterconfidential006tabswimsuitComing to theatres tomorrow, Friday, October 16: TAB HUNTER CONFIDENTIAL

Jeffrey Schwarz’s exploration of the secret life of a Hollywood heartthrob made its debut at SXSW this Spring. Its extensive fest run has also included Cleveland, Sarasota, Seattle, Maryland, Provincetown, Revelation, and LGBT fests in London, Miami, Boston, San Diego, Toronto, Portland, Torino, San Francisco, Honolulu, Denver, Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, Dublin, Atlanta, Montreal, and Sydney, among many others.

Tab Hunter – born Arthur Gelien – was the all-American boy next door, a handsome blond, blue-eyed young man who found success in Hollywood in the 1950s. As revealed in his 2006 autobiography, upon which Schwarz’s entertaining portrait is based, he was also gay, but the Warner Bros studio machine worked overtime to bury any rumors as they marketed him to the emerging teen audience, making him the subject of countless fan magazine articles and grooming a pop singing sideline career. As he tried to balance clandestine relationships with the likes of Anthony Perkins with the demands of the film industry, Hunter grew restless with the generic roles the studio offered. He eventually decided to strike out on his own, but was unable to shake off his highly-polished image, and his acting career lay mostly dormant until John Waters cast him in POLYESTER. Schwarz benefits greatly from Hunter’s full participation here, demonstrating a genuine affability rather than any rancor over lost opportunities or faded dreams. His sexuality remains primarily a private matter rather than a political cause, but he seems perfectly content with his life now, partnered with film producer Allan Glaser, and out of the limelight.

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Chicago 2015: Documentary Overview

imagesThe Chicago International Film Festival begins its second half century tonight, Thursday, October 15. The venerable event will screen more than 130 feature films by the time it wraps on Thursday, October 29. Among these are nearly 30 docs, of which a selection are profiled below.

SP-SylJohnsonAnyWayTheWindBlows2Two titles will have their world premieres here before heading to DOC NYC next month: Nicole N Horanyi’s MOTLEY’S LAW, about the only American lawyer licensed to practice in Afghan courts; and Rob Hatch-Miller’s SYL JOHNSON: ANY WAY THE WIND BLOWS (pictured), on the retired soul singer who found an unexpected second chance with the emergence of hip hop. Other titles include Daan Veldhuizen’s BANANA PANCAKES AND THE CHILDREN OF STICKY RICE, about the tension from development on a remote Laotian village; Patricia Natalia Bruschtein’s TIME SUSPENDED, about an aging woman’s struggles to retain the memories of Argentina’s disappeared; Ila Beka and Louise Lemoine’s THE INFINITE HAPPINESS, an exploration of a utopian communal Danish apartment complex; and Rosa von Praunheim’s TOUGH LOVE, a hybrid tale of a German pimp turned karate champion and the woman he loves.

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In Theatres & On VOD: A BALLERINA’S TALE

ballerina-2Coming to theatres and to VOD today, Wednesday, October 14: A BALLERINA’S TALE

Nelson George’s portrait of a groundbreaking dancer made its bow at Tribeca this Spring. It has since screened at Rio, Milwaukee, Urbanworld, Bentonville, Vancouver, and the Martha’s Vineyard African American Film Festival, among other events.

In its 75-year history, the American Ballet Theatre had never had an African-American female principal dancer – until Misty Copeland. George follows Copeland as she reckons with the physical stresses placed on dancer’s bodies, sustaining a potentially career-ending injury during her landmark turn in THE FIREBIRD that left her unable to dance for seven months. As the film reveals, she defied predictions and returned to ABT to continue to dance, but, just as importantly, her success in breaking substantial racial barriers catapulted Copeland into the public eye. This larger cultural context is more the point of George’s film rather than offering a straightforward biography of a talented dancer, noting, for example, that her turn as Firebird drew a substantial African-American audience to the Metropolitan Opera House for the first time in recent memory. While the film could have gone into Copeland’s family issues, or expanded on the very briefly mentioned eating disorder episode early in her time at ABT, what resonates more is how she came to be mentored into her larger role by other pioneering African American women, stepping outside of the personal and into her broader significance within the art form itself. Similarly, George’s film is noteworthy more for its subject and her impact than for any bravura filmmaking on display.

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DOC NYC 2015: Lineup Announced

once and for allIn my role as DOC NYC‘s Director of Programming, I’ve spent the last several months putting together the just-announced lineup for our 6th edition, which runs Thursday, November 12 through Thursday, November 19 at the IFC Center, SVA Theatre, and Bow Tie Chelsea Cinemas. America’s largest documentary festival continues to expand in 2015, bringing our total number of program offerings to more than 200, including an additional screen, more shorts programs, new thematic sections, and brand-new industry and university programming. Of the 104 features included this year, 27 are world premieres, 15 are North American or US premieres, and 39 are NYC premieres.

I’m planning to profile each section here in the weeks prior to our opening, but for the time being, find out more, and purchases passes and individual tickets, at our website via the links provided. Continue reading

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