Category Archives: Film

In Theatres: 1971

1971Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, February 6: 1971

Johanna Hamilton’s exploration of a pivotal act of civil disobedience had its world premiere at Tribeca last year. It went on to screen at IDFA, Sheffield, AFI Docs, Traverse City, and CPH:DOX, among others, and recently won the Cinema Eye Honors’ Spotlight Award and the IDA ABCNews VideoSource Award.

Hamilton’s film tells the story of The Citizens’ Commission to Investigate the FBI, a group of citizen underground activists who planned and staged a raid of a regional FBI office in Media PA, in the process exposing the agency’s controversial and illegal surveillance program, COINTELPRO, which existed to infiltrate, subvert, and disrupt various social and political movements, from Civil Rights groups to anti-war efforts. Vowing secrecy since the titular year, Hamilton’s appealing chronicle allows the unheralded Commission’s members to finally reveal their identities and share their story – and the motivations for their actions – for the first time. While re-enactments are employed to recreate the break-in – never my preferred manner of exposition – they are at least used sparingly and are well-produced, lending a tension to the participants’ compelling retelling. Ultimately, the true power in the film is its reminder of the dangers of unchecked power – clearly attaining an unfortunate topicality in light of the more recent actions of the NSA – and in the potential impact of an aware and dissenting citizenry willing to make personal sacrifices in the face of its government’s ethical and legal transgressions.

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On VOD: GIUSEPPE MAKES A MOVIE

giuseppe makesComing to VOD tomorrow, Friday, February 6: GIUSEPPE MAKES A MOVIE

Adam Rifkin’s candid look at an outsider auteur had its world premiere at Hot Docs last year. Additional screenings followed at Los Angeles Film Festival, Rooftop Films, Houston Cinema Arts Festival, Hot Springs, Atlantic, and Poland’s New Horizons.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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Berlin 2015: Documentary Overview

berlin 2015The venerable Berlin International Film Festival turns 65 this year, opening tomorrow, Thursday, February 5 and running through Sunday, February 15. Germany’s largest film festival annually screens in excess of 400 films, which include this year nearly 80 new documentary features, as well as some retrospective work. In addition to this onscreen component, the Berlinale also features nonfiction-focused programming as part of the simultaneous European Film Market’s Meet the Docs initiative, made up of a Doc Spotlight series curated by IDFA, CPH:DOX, and DOK Leipzig, and a robust program of documentary panels, as well as the Berlinale Talents program’s Doc Station, in which ten nonfiction projects from five continents receive development support over the course of the event. Sadly, my schedule has not permitted me to attend this year, but if I were, I’d direct my viewing time to the following documentaries on offer:

pearlThe festival’s Competition section very rarely includes nonfiction work, but this year does present one documentary, THE PEARL BUTTON (pictured), auteur Patricio Guzmán’s meditation on Chile’s coastline and water; while Berlinale Special offers three, including Jack Pettibone Riccobono’s THE SEVENTH FIRE, about the threat of gang violence on a Native American reservation in Minnesota.

fassbinderDocumentary’s more typical home at the festival have been in the Panorama section, which this year showcases eighteen feature docs. Among these are portraits of notable figures, such as Christian Braad Thomsen’s FASSBINDER – TO LOVE WITHOUT DEMANDS (pictured), a personal tribute to the noted New German Cinema director; Jack Walsh’s FEELINGS ARE FACTS: THE LIFE OF YVONNE RAINER, which gives the acclaimed modern dancer/choreographer/filmmaker her due; and Jean-Gabriel Périot’s A GERMAN YOUTH, an archival rich portrait of key members of the Red Army Faction. Other Panorama titles include LGBT-focused work, such as Jan Soldat’s PRISON SYSTEM 4614, about prison fetishists, and Jannik Splidsboel’s MISFITS, a look at the lives of three queer Tulsa teens; as well as a look at the absurdity of war in Saeed Taji Farouky and Michael McEvoy’s TELL SPRING NOT TO COME THIS YEAR, which follows the Afghan National Army as they take over a dangerous province after the withdrawal of NATO troops.

flotelNonfiction and its hybrid forms traditionally have also been welcomed in the festival’s often more off-kilter Forum; this year twenty such features appear, including several work-focused films: Joaquim Pinto and Nuno Leonel’s FISH TAIL, about a fisherman in the Azores; Francesco Clerici’s HAND GESTURES, an observational portrait of an Italian bronze foundry; Michel K Zongo’s THE SIREN OF FASO FANI, a personal reflection on the decline of the Burkina Faso filmmaker’s hometown after the shuttering of its textile factory; Nikolaus Geyrhalter’s OVER THE YEARS, which similarly documents the consequences of the shutdown of a local community’s textile factory; and Janina Herhoffer’s AFTER WORK, which looks at group leisure activities from yoga to band practice. Additional films include Vladimir Tomic’s FLOTEL EUROPA (pictured), which revisits the director’s childhood as a Yugoslavian refugee taking up residence on a ship in Copenhagen; Marcin Malaszczak’s THE DAYS RUN AWAY LIKE WILD HORSES OVER THE HILLS, a focus on the ephemeral moments of everyday life; Jem Cohen’s COUNTING, an essay film exploring several cities; and Tatiana Brandrup’s CINEMA: A PUBLIC AFFAIR, about the curator of the now-closed Moscow Film Museum and his struggles with official forces.

so be itTwo documentaries for younger viewers appear in the Generation section: Kongdej Jaturanrasmee’s SO BE IT (pictured), which profiles two very different boys’ experiences of Buddhism; and Teboho Edkins’ COMING OF AGE, about South African teenagers who must choose between the life of a traditional shepherd or instead pursue education. Two new docs also appear in the NATIVe section, devoted to indigenous cinema, including María Dolores Arias Martínez’s ELDEST BROTHER, an observational portrait of a Chiapas elder as he navigates tradition and modernity.

tito'sLocal filmmakers’ work appears in Perspektive Deutsches Kino, including three documentaries. Among these are Saskia Walker and Ralf Hechelmann’s SEX: SPEAK, which attempts to explore sexuality through interviews; and Filippa Bauer’s UNOCCUPIED, an exploration of the lives of women facing empty nest syndrome. Other German work – specifically contenders for the Lola, the German Film Awards – appear in the Lola at Berlinale sidebar. Among these are seventeen docs, including: Annekatrin Hendel’s ANDERSON, on the German writer, secretly a Stasi spy; Ulrike Franke and Michael Loeken’s DIVINE LOCATION: A CITY REINVENTS ITSELF, about a new residential community developed against the backdrop of a traditionally industrial area; and Regina Schilling’s TITO’S GLASSES (pictured), which recounts the history of a Yugoslavian family who resettled in Germany.

omnivorousFinally, Berlinale’s popular food-focused Culinary Cinema section showcases a dozen films – among them: Luis González and Andrea Gómez’s COOKING UP A TRIBUTE, which follows the renowned Roca brothers on a multi-city tour of culinary reinvention; Anne Georget’s IMAGINARY FEASTS, an exploration of the common practice of prisoners writing recipes as a form of resistance; Yun Hwang’s AN OMNIVOROUS FAMILY’S DILEMMA (pictured), in which the director immerses herself in the lives of pigs; Phie Ambo’s GOOD THINGS AWAIT, about an aging biodynamic Danish farmer and the fate of his farm; and Willemiek Kluijfhout’s SERGIO HERMAN, FUCKING PERFECT, a profile of a Dutch masterchef whose pursuit of perfection threatens his family life.

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In Theatres: MATT SHEPARD IS A FRIEND OF MINE

matt shepardComing to theatres this Friday, February 6: MATT SHEPARD IS A FRIEND OF MINE

Michele Josue’s personal remembrance of a fallen friend made its world premiere at Mill Valley in 2013. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, IDFA, Cleveland, CNEX Taipei Doc, St Louis, Atlanta’s Out on Film, Rochester’s ImageOut, Miami Gay, Toronto’s Inside Out, and Russia’s Side by Side LGBT fests, among others.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
When gay college student Matthew Shepard’s savagely beaten body was discovered lashed to a fence near Laramie, Wyoming in 1998, the deadly consequences of homophobia received international attention. While Matt’s death left an indelible mark, the details of his life are less familiar. His friend Michele Josue turns to those who knew him best, and aided by personal photos, videos and journal entries, she constructs a poignant, multifaceted biography of a young man who was more than just a victim.

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SXSW 2015: Features Lineup Announced

sxsw-film-logoSXSW has just released their initial list of features, with the Midnighters and Shorts sections to be announced next Tuesday, February 10, and conference panels to follow on Tuesday, February 17. About 67 of the 145 features announced so far are documentaries, which seems to reflect a healthy increase compared to last year’s nonfiction offerings. Following is the list of documentary features, broken down by section: Continue reading

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On DVD: FOOD CHAINS

food chainsComing to DVD today, Tuesday, February 3: FOOD CHAINS

Sanjay Rawal’s investigation into unjust treatment of migrant farmworkers bowed at Berlin last year. Other festival stops included Tribeca, Guadalajara, Vancouver, Minneapolis St Paul, and Napa Valley.

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

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On TV: OUR MOCKINGBIRD

mockingbirdComing to PBS’s America ReFramed tonight, Tuesday, February 3: OUR MOCKINGBIRD

Sandra Jaffe’s exploration of race and class in America has had various work-in-progress and community screenings since 2010, including Sidewalk, Newburyport Doc, Roxbury, and the Boston Jewish film fests.

Using TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD as its focal point, Jaffe’s film considers the progress – and lack thereof – of race relations in the more than five decades since the publication of Harper Lee’s seminal novel. At its core is the collaborative staging of a play adapted from Lee’s singular work by two Birmingham AL high schools – one exclusively white, the other exclusively black – demonstrating the lingering shadow of segregation in areas of the South. While Jaffe follows the teens in their preparations, tackling the story’s themes of racism and injustice even as they navigate their first real encounters and friendships with peers of a different race, the filmmaker supplements their stories with those of familiar figures who speak to the influence and lasting impact of Lee’s book, from civil rights leaders like US Congressman John Lewis and cast members from the film adaptation, to US Attorney General Eric Holder and television journalist Katie Couric. Culminating with the successful mounting of the play – attended by Nelle Harper Lee herself – the film proves watchable, even if it occasionally meanders, attempting to cover too much territory in its relatively brief running time.

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On DVD/VOD: SEX(ED)

sex edComing to DVD and VOD today, Tuesday, February 3: SEX(ED)

Brenda Goodman’s exploration of sex ed films premiered at Cinequest last year. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, Cleveland, Full Frame, DOXA, and Dances With Films, among other events.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
How did you first learn about sex? Before the Internet put a shocking amount of sexually explicit information at our fingertips, generations of Americans first encountered the birds and the bees at school, usually through educational films. Brenda Goodman assembles an eye-opening array of these well-intentioned but often funny teaching tools to reveal our culture’s ever-fraught relationship to sex and the human body. Revisit the health class of your awkward teenage years and join us for SEX(ED)!

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On DVD: THE NEW PUBLIC

The-New-Public_570-x-317Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, February 3: THE NEW PUBLIC

Jyllian Gunther’s exploration of an alternative inner city high school made its debut at the Hamptons in 2012. Additional screenings followed at Urbanworld, African Diaspora, deadCENTER, Hot Springs, Boulder, and the San Francisco Doc fests, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV & DVD: THE BIG BURN

big burnComing to PBS’s American Experience and to DVD today, Tuesday, February 3: THE BIG BURN

Stephen Ives’ recounting of an infamous forest fire makes its debut on the venerable PBS program as well as on DVD.

In the Summer of 1910, an unprecedented wildfire claimed more than three million acres of forest in the Northern Rockies in about a day and a half. As the nascent – and overconfident – US Forest Service attempted to combat the blaze, calling upon several companies of African American recruits – the Buffalo Soldiers – to aid the effort, they found themselves facing the near-impossible task of reining in Mother Nature. As argued in Ives’ informative if conventionally structured film, which is based on historian Timothy Egan’s book, the grave lessons learned from the devastating blaze spurred Washington to expand the protection of the nation’s public lands, and to adopt policies to prevent its repetition – with both good and bad consequences. While the 1910 fire made legends of the valiant men who fought it, creating the image of the forest ranger as a selfless national hero, the standing order that resulted, to suppress every subsequent forest fire, may have unintentionally backfired, removing a natural, replenishing cycle of small wildfires and instead turning swaths of forest into fuel for larger, more destructive fires to again blaze out of control.

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