DOC NYC‘s sixth of six shorts programs turns the focus on young boys: Continue reading
Category Archives: Film
2014 DOC NYC in Focus: SHOW + TELL
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On DVD: WE COULD BE KING
New to DVD this week: WE COULD BE KING
Judd Ehrlich’s look at a high school football team debuted at Tribeca this Spring. It went on to be broadcast on ESPN.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Special Screening: ALICE WALKER: BEAUTY IN TRUTH
Coming to NYC’s Maysles Cinema as part of the DocWatchers series tonight, Thursday, February 13: ALICE WALKER: BEAUTY IN TRUTH
Pratibha Parmar’s profile of the acclaimed activist/author debuted at London’s Women of the World Festival last year. It went on to fests like Seattle, Frameline, Outfest, Chicago, Athena, St Louis, Vancouver, African Diaspora, Bronze Lens, Mill Valley, Inside Out, and Napa Valley, among others.
I previously wrote about the doc upon its broadcast debut here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations
2014 DOC NYC in Focus: Doc-A-Thon Day 6 – Reach Your Audience
Doc-A-Thon, DOC NYC‘s panel series, wraps up with a series of panels on the critical topic of audience engagement. All of the following Day 6 panel sessions take place between 10:30am-5:00pm at the IFC Center on the closing day of the festival, Thursday, November 20: Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On DVD: ORNETTE: MADE IN AMERICA
Newly available on DVD this week: ORNETTE: MADE IN AMERICA
Shirley Clarke’s freeform profile of a modern jazz master debuted at Toronto in 1985. Rarely seen for years, the documentary was restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive, screened at Berlin in 2012, and was re-released theatrically that same year. In addition to the release of the restored version on DVD, the film comes to Blu-ray for the first time ever.
In what ended up as the pioneering director’s final film, Clarke set out to capture the freewheeling sense of her subject, jazz musician Ornette Coleman, without exactly crafting either a traditional biography or concert film. Elements of both appear, but they’re joined by eclectic flights of fancy, from re-enactments to video game effects, strobelike editing to bizarre lunar animations. Grounding the film is “Skies of America,” the avant-garde score Coleman composed for the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra – in addition to footage of the performance on a day honoring native son Coleman in 1983, it plays in the background throughout Clarke’s unusually constructed, non-linear project, which attempts to convey a sense of Coleman’s humble beginnings; his relationship with his son, also a member of his band; his creative process; and his varied inspirations and influences. Frankly, it’s a tall order – despite its at times refreshing resistance to conventions, the film feels messy rather than strongly connected to Coleman’s work or approach, with the special video effects looking especially dated. Despite this, interviews with the soft-spoken Coleman – and for music lovers, his performance footage – make Clarke’s film a worthwhile, if uneven, watch.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
2014 DOC NYC in Focus: Doc-A-Thon Day 5 – Fund Your Doc
The penultimate day of Doc-A-Thon, DOC NYC‘s panel series, focuses on the current state of nonfiction funding. All of the following Day 5 panel sessions take place between 10:30am-5:00pm at the IFC Center on Wednesday, November 19: Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
RIDM 2014 Overview
Tonight, Wednesday, November 12 sees the opening of the 17th edition of the Montreal International Documentary Festival, more familiar as RIDM, with the world premiere of Kim Nguyen’s THE EMPIRE OF SCENTS (LE NEZ), an exploration of the sense of smell, inspired by a sommelier’s book. The fest closes on Sunday, November 23 with Nicolas Wadimoff’s SPARTANS, a profile of a suburban Marseille MMA and the school he runs. Between these two films, RIDM will screen over sixty new and recent nonfiction features, plus shorts and new media projects. While the simultaneous presentation of DOC NYC on the festival calendar makes it impossible for me to attend, here are the titles that caught my attention: Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
2014 DOC NYC in Focus: POINT + SHOOT
Photography is at the center of the fifth of six DOC NYC shorts programs: Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
In Theatres: LEVITATED MASS
Coming to NYC theatres this Friday, November 14: LEVITATED MASS
Doug Pray’s charting of the construction of a massive art project premiered at the Los Angeles Film Festival last year. Its fest circuit included DOC NYC, Florida, Cleveland, Napa Valley, Martha’s Vineyard, and Sebastopol Doc, among others. After a theatrical run in Los Angeles this past September, it now opens in NYC.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
On VOD: PEOPLE’S PARK
Coming to VOD via iTunes today, Tuesday, November 11: PEOPLE’S PARK
Libbie D Cohn and JP Sniadecki’s single-take tour through a Chinese park debuted at Locarno in 2012. Its fest circuit has included Vancouver, Beijing Independent, Doclisboa, Viennale, Punto de Vista, Cinéma du Réel, New Directors/New Films, It’s All True, Edinburgh, Margaret Mead, RIDM, and the Whitney Biennial, among others. After its iTunes exclusive release, the film will be released on other major VOD platforms next Tuesday, November 18.
A project of Harvard’s Sensory Ethnography Lab, Cohn and Sniadecki’s film aims to bring an immersive aspect to traditional models of ethnographic documentary. In this case, the method employed is a continuous take which lasts for the entirety of the film’s 75 minute running time, absent the brief end credits. Shot in Chengdu, the capital of China’s Sichuan province, the film presents the various goings-on within the bustling titular public space, bookended by the spectacle of public dancing. Along their measured, circuitous path through the park, Cohn and Sniadecki – the former shooting while seated in a wheelchair pushed by the latter, creating their own low-cost dolly, and in the process approximating a child’s perspective, perhaps intentionally, so as to engender a sense of exploration and wonderment – capture the anonymous masses enjoying their State-sanctioned leisure time, pouring drinks at picnic tables, rowing boats in the lake, buying shish kabobs, sitting for a chat, or, more often, acknowledging the presence of the filmmakers, whether by averting their gaze, flashing a quick peace sign, or simply looking back quizzically. As a result, the sense of immersion is constantly questioned, the camera a brief disruption to the everyday activities it attempts to document. Calling attention to itself, the film underscores its status as an experiment more than a genuine experience of immersion, which seems to be its point. Now, whether the film needed over an hour to establish that is the bigger question – it makes for a diverting virtual tour for a short jaunt, but isn’t quite commanding enough to prevent the mind from wandering away from the park and into other terrain.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
