The fourth of six DOC NYC shorts programs puts work in the spotlight: Continue reading
Category Archives: Film
2014 DOC NYC in Focus: PARTS + LABOR
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On VOD: I AM SANTA CLAUS
Coming to VOD today, Tuesday, November 11: I AM SANTA CLAUS
Tommy Avallone’s 365-day Santa profile premiered at the Hollywood Film Festival last month. After a series of one-night-only screenings last week, the Morgan Spurlock executive produced doc comes to VOD platforms.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
2014 DOC NYC in Focus: Doc-A-Thon Day 4 – Finish Your Doc
DOC NYC‘s daily panel series, Doc-A-Thon, continues with masterclasses focused around postproduction essentials. All of the following Day 4 panel sessions take place between 10:30am-5:00pm at the IFC Center on Tuesday, November 18: Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On DVD: WALKING THE CAMINO
Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, November 11: WALKING THE CAMINO: SIX WAYS TO SANTIAGO
Lydia Smith’s look at the famous Spanish pilgrimage premiered at Ashland last year. It went on to Newport Beach, Galway, American Doc, Heartland, and Hollywood, among others, followed by a limited theatrical release this Summer.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
2014 DOC NYC in Focus: THE CULT OF JT LEROY
DOC NYC is pleased to announced a late-breaking addition to this year’s Special Events section: The World Premiere of Marjorie Sturm’s THE CULT OF JT LEROY
DOC NYC Program Description
THE CULT OF JT LEROY
Director: Marjorie Sturm
WORLD PREMIERE
JT LeRoy burst onto the literary scene in the late 1990s, attracting a devoted following through stark tales of poverty, abuse and underage prostitution in books like Sarah and The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things. His was a rags-to-riches story, with his own tortured life inspiring his writing—or so he claimed. Drawn into LeRoy’s inner circle before the truth came to light, director Marjorie Sturm was misled like many others. Through intimate interviews with many close to the tarnished figure, she attempts to untangle what really happened, and in the process explores how this deception called into question not only the value of LeRoy’s writing absent authenticity, but our culture’s complicity within the author’s seductive cult of personality.
Expected to attend: Marjorie Sturm and special guests from the film
Why You Should Attend:
In DOC NYC’s five-year history, there’s never been a film added to the lineup this late, so you know it takes a special kind of film and topic to break with precedent. First-time documentary feature director Sturm has been working on this project for several years, and we’re excited to host its debut with three opportunities to see the film!
More Info:
To purchase tickets, click here and follow links for ticketing; or check out the new options for Passes.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
Special Screening: KUMU HINA
Coming to Los Angeles’ ArcLight Doc Series tonight, Monday, November 10: KUMU HINA
Dean Hamer and Joe Wilson’s portrait of a powerful Hawaiian transgender teacher debuted at the Hawaii International Film Festival in Honolulu this Spring. It went on to screen at Frameline, QDoc, Maui, Dallas Asian, NYC’s Asian American, Rhode Island, Docutah, and LGBT fests in Beijing, Chicago, Jakarta, Austin, Hong Kong, Minneapolis, Auckland, and Wellington, among several others.
Hamer and Wilson’s film follows the interconnected, parallel stories of Hina Wong-Kalu, who teaches traditional Hawaiian culture at a Honolulu school, and her student, Ho’onani, a sixth grade girl who is drawn to the boys’ hula troupe. Championing the Hawaiian conception of mahu – the coexistence of male and female spirit – Hina encourages Ho’onani’s pursuit, and her trust is borne out as the tomboy quickly emerges as a leader of the group. Outside of the school setting, Hina contends with relationship issues, as her younger Tongan husband exasperates her with his drinking and jealousy, while she also tries to balance her work to preserve traditional Hawaiian culture, investigating the disturbance of local burial sites. The filmmakers adroitly capture a strong yet vulnerable woman in a well-rounded manner too often missing from many profiles of transgender individuals that only focus on a singular aspect of their identity.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations
On DVD/VOD: BRIDGEND
Coming to DVD and VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, November 11: BRIDGEND
John Michael Williams’ exploration of a rash of teen suicides seems to have bypassed film festival screenings and to go directly to to DVD, as well as to VOD exclusively via Netflix.
Beginning in 2007, the titular South Wales town has seen scores of deaths by suicide – mostly by hanging, absent suicide notes, and by young people. From the first reported discovery of the body of eighteen-year-old Dale – who had been missing for several months – in an amusement park, to the subsequent suicide of one of his best friends, David, six weeks later, theories have abounded of a serial killer, suicide pacts, Internet cults, or other nefarious explanations. As more teenagers fell victim, the media circus grew, particularly when young women started to kill themselves. Williams’ film examines this unusual incidence rate from an inside perspective, through interviews with family members and friends of the deceased, witnesses who found bodies, and coroners and other authorities. While some offer explanations – the dead-end nature of Bridgend itself, a former market town with no major industry or opportunities left save its nightlife, or the idea of contagion, with the first suicide serving as a trigger to others predisposed to taking their own lives – the film’s strength lies in the haunting presence of the departed – one young man interviewed here was later to take his own life – and in the emotional resonance their loss has had on those left behind.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
2014 DOC NYC in Focus: LOST + FOUND
My closer look at DOC NYC continues with the third of six shorts programs, a series exploring unexpected discoveries: Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On DVD: PORTRAIT OF JASON
Coming to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, November 11: PORTRAIT OF JASON
Shirley Clarke’s seminal look at black gay male identity debuted at the New York Film Festival in 1967. Milestone Films and the Academy Film Archive debuted the restored film at Berlin last year, followed by a theatrical re-release and festival screenings at London, Poland’s American Film Festival, CPH:DOX, and the upcoming IDFA. This release also marks the first time the film has ever been available on Blu-ray.
I wrote about the film upon its theatrical re-release here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
2014 DOC NYC in Focus: Doc-A-Thon Day 3 – Shoot Your Doc
Day 3 of DOC NYC‘s daily panel series, Doc-A-Thon, consists of a series of masterclasses around documentary film production. All of the following Day 3 panel sessions take place between 10:30am-5:00pm at the IFC Center on Monday, November 17: Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
