Category Archives: Film

On DVD: KEEP ON KEEPIN’ ON

keep onComing to DVD today, Tuesday, January 13: KEEP ON KEEPIN’ ON

Alan Hicks’ study of music and mentorship made its bow at Tribeca last year. The film went on to screen at DOC NYC, Hot Docs, London, Sydney, Telluride, and Provincetown among others, and made the Oscar shortlist for Best Documentary Feature.

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

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2015 Sundance Docs in Focus: DRUNK STONED BRILLIANT DEAD: THE STORY OF THE NATIONAL LAMPOON

drunk stonedDocumentary Premieres continues with a look at comedy history: Douglas Tirola’s DRUNK STONED BRILLIANT DEAD: THE STORY OF THE NATIONAL LAMPOON. Continue reading

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ON VOD: PUMP

pumpComing to VOD today, Tuesday, January 13: PUMP

Josh Tickell and Rebecca Harrell Tickell’s call for an end to the gasoline monopoly was released theatrically this past September. It largely bypassed the film festival circuit, but did appear at Zurich as a special screening. The doc now comes to iTunes.

The Tickells’ previous work, including the Cannes-debuting THE BIG FIX and Sundance audience award-winner FUEL, has tackled the Deepwater Horizon accident and alternative energy, respectively. Their newest documentary is once again focused on the world’s dependence on fossil fuels, but takes a different, more practical, tack. As signaled by its title, the film proffers that the solution to our oil problem boils down to consumer choice: Give car owners options beyond gasoline at the point of sale, and market forces will lead to energy diversification and independence. Before the Tickells run through what those options might be, they provide an overview of how we’ve got to the point we’re at now, a necessary part of their argument, but tends toward a dry survey which covers fairly familiar ground – from John D Rockefeller’s Standard Oil monopoly and backing of Prohibition to eliminate alcohol-based fuel options, to the cycles of oil crisis, recession, and war that have wreaked havoc on our economy for decades. Much more effective, and sometimes surprising, is the film’s second half, which shifts away from this sobering, frustrating history to instead present a hopeful, sensible corrective which, importantly, is also empowering on a personal level. Recognizing that promising solutions like the electric car will require decades to make a true impact – after all, how quickly do most people purchase new cars? – the more obvious answer is to work with consumers’ pre-existing vehicles. Little promoted “flex fuel” cars are already on the road, with most of their owners not even knowing their vehicles can use cheaper, environmentally safer, and job-generating ethanol, or a combination of gas and ethanol, and, even more startling, virtually all cars can be converted to accept alternative fuels by simply adjusting their software. While obstacles stand in the way – government regulation and oil company control, primarily – the Tickells’ advocacy film holds forth the promise of making change through consumer empowerment enabled by awareness and education.

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2015 Sundance Docs in Focus: THE BLACK PANTHERS: VANGUARD OF THE REVOLUTION

black panthersDocumentary Premieres welcomes back Sundance alumnus Stanley Nelson with his newest film: THE BLACK PANTHERS: VANGUARD OF THE REVOLUTION, the definitive account of the influential Black nationalist organization. Continue reading

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On DVD/VOD: THE CASE AGAINST 8

case 8Coming to VOD today, Monday, January 12 and to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, January 13: THE CASE AGAINST 8

Ben Cotner and Ryan White’s behind-the-scenes look at the Supreme Court fight over marriage equality debuted at Sundance last year, claiming a directing award. Its circuit also included SXSW, DOC NYC, Nantucket, Cleveland, DOXA, Hot Docs, Sarasota, and Dallas, among others. The Oscar shortlisted doc now comes to iTunes and to DVD.

My pre-Sundance profile of the doc may be found here.

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2015 Sundance Docs in Focus: BEAVER TRILOGY PART IV

beaver trilogyMoving over to this year’s Documentary Premieres section: Brad Besser’s chronicle of a cult classic, BEAVER TRILOGY PART IV.

 

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On TV: KLANSVILLE USA

klansvilleComing to PBS’s American Experience tomorrow, Tuesday, January 13: KLANSVILLE USA

Callie T Wiser’s exploration of the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1960s makes its debut as part of the 27th season of the venerable PBS program, and is based in part on the book by the same name by sociologist David Cunningham.

Wiser provides a brief but informative history lesson on the origins, rise, fall, rebirth (thanks to 1915’s THE BIRTH OF THE NATION), and second fall of the white supremacist organization before focusing in specifically on its eventual re-emergence and unanticipated growth after the Supreme Court struck down Plessy vs Ferguson‘s “separate but equal” doctrine in 1954’s Brown vs Board of Education. While the growth of the civil rights movement provided the impetus for the dormant for decades group to return in the segregationist South, Wiser’s film seeks to explain how its traditionally most progressive state, North Carolina, became the KKK’s new base of power. While North Carolina sought a middle ground of gradual reform, a disaffected class of the white working poor grew increasingly resentful of the strides made by African Americans. The Klan offered a way to channel this group’s desire to not be on the bottom rung of society, with added incentive provided by their religious and anti-communist rhetoric. At the center of the North Carolina Klan was their Grand Dragon, Bob Jones, responsible for the massive expansion of the group, and the key figure of Wiser’s conventionally constructed, and very heavily narrated doc. She does a serviceable job of revealing the KKK’s history during this period, though the film’s limited running time precludes further expansion of its more interesting aspects, particularly the efforts of the FBI and the House Un-American Activities Committee to undermine Jones and dismantle his group’s credibility and power structure.

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2015 Sundance Docs in Focus: THE VISIT

visitThis week’s Sundance doc profiles open with the final film of the 2015 World Cinema Documentary Competition: From Denmark, Michael Madsen’s THE VISIT, a speculative run-through of first contact. Continue reading

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On TV: TRASH DANCE

Trash-DanceComing to PBS’s America ReFramed on the WORLD Channel tomorrow, Tuesday, January 13: TRASH DANCE

Andrew Garrison’s profile of vehicular choreography made its bow at SXSW in 2012, garnering a special jury mention. Screenings followed at New Orleans, Full Frame, Silverdocs, SF DocFest, DocuWest, Warsaw, Heartland, DOXA, Lincoln Center’s Dance on Camera, and Napa Valley, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On VOD: VESSEL

vesselComing to VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, January 13: VESSEL

Diana Whitten’s exploration of the fight for reproductive rights on the high seas debuted at SXSW this Spring, where it picked up both a special jury prize and an audience award. Its fest circuit has also included Nantucket, DOC NYC, Hot Docs, Sheffield, Jerusalem, Sarasota, and IFF Boston.

I previously wrote about the film here.

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