Category Archives: Film

2015 Sundance Docs in Focus: SEMBENE!

sembeneThe penultimate contender in this year’s World Cinema Documentary Competition hails from Senegal/USA: Samba Gadjigo and Jason Silverman’s SEMBENE!, a tribute to the acclaimed African filmmaker. Continue reading

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On TV: EVOLUTION OF A CRIMINAL

evolutionComing to PBS’s Independent Lens this coming Monday, January 12: EVOLUTION OF A CRIMINAL

Darius Clark Monroe’s confrontation with his own dark past bowed at SXSW last year. Its fest circuit has included New Orleans, Full Frame, Dallas, Los Angeles, BlackStar, and BAMcinemaFest, among others.

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

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2015 Sundance Docs in Focus: THE RUSSIAN WOODPECKER

russian woodpeckerNext up in the World Cinema Documentary Competition is the sixth and final UK production: Chad Gracia’s THE RUSSIAN WOODPECKER, a secret history of the Chernobyl disaster. Continue reading

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On DVD: EXPEDITION TO THE END OF THE WORLD

expeditionComing to DVD this coming Tuesday, January 13: EXPEDITION TO THE END OF THE WORLD

Daniel Dencik’s Arctic Circle odyssey had its world premiere at CPH:DOX in 2012. Screenings followed at True/False, Docville, Thessaloniki Doc, Planete+ Doc, Karlovy Vary, Los Angeles, AFI Docs, and Traverse City, among others.

I included the doc in my True/False coverage here.

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2015 Sundance Docs in Focus: PERVERT PARK

pervert parkThe 2015 Sundance World Cinema Documentary Competition continues: From Sweden/Denmark, Frida Barkfors and Lasse Barkfors’ PERVERT PARK, an up-close portrait of a community of sex offenders. Continue reading

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2015 Sundance Docs in Focus: LISTEN TO ME MARLON

listen to me marlonToday’s third Sundance profile is the fifth of six UK productions in this year’s World Cinema Documentary Competition: Stevan Riley’s LISTEN TO ME MARLON, an assessment of Marlon Brando’s life and career through his own words. Continue reading

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In Theatres: MEN OF THE CLOTH

Men-of-the-Cloth-Key-Image-Photo-by-Jessica-KostinComing to select theatres starting today, Thursday, January 8: MEN OF THE CLOTH

Vicki Vasilopoulos’ profile of master tailors had its world premiere at DOC NYC in 2013. Other screenings include Montclair, LA Femme, and Hamptons Take 2 Doc fests.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Italians Nino Corvato, Joe Centofanti, and Checchino Fonticoli are master tailors who have spent years perfecting all the skills necessary to construct flawless custom-made suits for their clients in NYC, Philadelphia and Penne, Italy, a fascinating process broken down step by step here. As they grow older, they fear their Old World knowledge will vanish with them. Enter Joe Genuardi, a tailoring apprentice who reflects the resurgence of popular interest in artisanal craftsmanship as an alternative to corporate mass production, providing hope for the future of the craft.

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2015 Sundance Docs in Focus: HOW TO CHANGE THE WORLD

how to change the worldThe second half of the 2015 Sundance World Cinema Documentary Competition sees the world premiere of Jerry Rothwell’s Day One film HOW TO CHANGE THE WORLD, from the UK/Canada, an exploration of the origins of Greenpeace. Continue reading

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In Theatres & Special Screenings: FAREWELL HERR SCHWARZ

farewellComing to theatres this Friday, January 9 and also screening as part of the JCC in Manhattan’s CineMatters series this weekend: FAREWELL HERR SCHWARZ

Yael Reuveny’s investigation into her great-uncle’s disappearance during the Holocaust debuted at Haifa in 2013, where it won the Best Israeli Documentary. Other fest berths included DOK Leipzig, Cottbus, and at the Miami, Toronto, and Palm Beach Jewish fests, among others.

Reuveny is part of Israel’s third generation, the grandchild of Holocaust survivor Michla Schwarz, whose stories of survival and loss the filmmaker grew up listening to. Michla – who believed herself to be her family’s sole survivor after her beloved brother Feiv’ke failed to make a pre-arranged meeting at a train station in Lodz, Poland – moved to Israel, raised a family, and cursed Germany for the rest of her unhappy life. Reuveny recognizes that her own decision to move to Germany would not have been met with approval by Michla – as it is, her mother, Etty, Michla’s daughter, isn’t particularly happy about it either – but Reuveny was drawn there because of the fate of Michla’s family. Shortly before her grandmother’s death, Yael learns that Feiv’ke survived the concentration camps, but surprisingly elected to stay in the same small German town where he had been imprisoned, changed his name to Peter, and married a German woman. Reuveny sets out to understand why – and why Feiv’ke never showed up in Lodz or ever contacted Michla – and in the process explores the impact of Michla and Feiv’ke’s splintering on three generations of their families. While personal quests can more often than not feel incredibly self-indulgent, in this case Reuveny successfully broadens the questions raised by the decisions of her great-uncle and his offspring – not to mention her own – into a thoughtful consideration of modern Jewish identity and the legacy of the Holocaust.

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2015 Sundance Docs in Focus: DREAMCATCHER

dreamcatcherWe come to the end of the first half of this year’s World Cinema Documentary Competition with DREAMCATCHER, UK director Kim Longinotto’s candid portrait of a woman’s redemptive fight against sexual exploitation. Continue reading

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