Category Archives: Film

On TV: THE LULU SESSIONS

luluComing to PBS’s America ReFramed series tonight, Tuesday, September 9: THE LULU SESSIONS

S Casper Wong’s personal record of her ex-lover’s struggle with breast cancer debuted at the LA Asian Pacific Film Festival in 2011. It played a number of LGBT fests, including Boston, Inside Out, Austin, Seattle, Mix Copenhagen, Q Doc, and Vancouver, and Asian fests in NYC, Washington DC, and San Diego, among others.

Wong agrees to start filming LuLu from the moment that her friend calls to find out the results of a lump biopsy. Following her intermittently from treatment through death, Wong constructs a sometimes intriguing, non-chronological portrait of the foul-mouthed LuLu – ironically, we eventually find out, a cancer researcher – and of their complicated connection. Supporting her when LuLu’s apparently insane sisters reject her, theirs is a complex, enmeshed relationship that has taken on several permutations – mentor, lover, and friend – though neither is this as surprising to the viewer as it seems Wong thinks it will be, nor does it always translate into the most gripping footage. Add Wong’s excessive narration, and it makes for an uneven project, and one largely buoyed by the appealing LuLu.

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On DVD: THE GALAPAGOS AFFAIR

galapagos affairComing to DVD today, Tuesday, September 9: THE GALAPAGOS AFFAIR: SATAN CAME TO EDEN

Dayna Goldfine and Dan Geller’s chronicle of a bizarre 1930s murder mystery bowed at Telluride last year. It went on to screen at the Hamptons, Berlin, New Orleans filmOrama, Palm Springs, and Bermuda, among others.

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

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On DVD: WHO IS DAYANI CRISTAL?

dayaniComing to DVD today, Tuesday, September 9: WHO IS DAYANI CRISTAL?

Marc Silver’s intimate look at immigration debuted at Sundance last year, winning the World Cinema Documentary Cinematography Award. Its festival circuit also included Hot Docs, San Sebastian, San Diego Latino, Abu Dhabi, Zurich, Rome, Miami, and the New York Film Festival, among others.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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On VOD: ELENA

ElenaComing to VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, September 9: ELENA

Petra Costa’s meditation on family premiered at the Festival de Brasília in 2012. It went on to IDFA, SXSW, Hot Docs, Planete+ Doc, ZagrebDox, Havana, and Rooftop Films.

I included the film in my SXSW coverage here.

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On DVD/VOD: FED UP

fed upComing to DVD and VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, September 9: FED UP

Stephanie Soechtig’s provocative investigation into America’s obesity epidemic debuted at Sundance this January. Screenings followed at San Francisco, Hot Docs, Martha’s Vineyard, San Francisco, and Traverse City.

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

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Special Screening & In Theatres: THE GREEN PRINCE

green princeComing to NYC’s JCC Manhattan for its CineMatters series tomorrow, Tuesday, September 9 and opening in theatres this Friday, September 12: THE GREEN PRINCE

Nadav Schirman’s stranger-than-fiction tale of unexpected Israeli/Hamas cooperation premiered at Sundance this year, where it won the World Cinema Documentary Audience Award. It went on to screen at Human Rights Watch, San Francisco Jewish, Dallas Jewish, Seattle, Sarasota, Moscow, DocAviv, and the upcoming Atlantic fest.

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

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In Theatres: THE RULE

ruleComing to theatres today, Friday, September 5: THE RULE

Marylou and Jerome Bongiorno’s profile of a Newark prep school debuted at the Montclair Film Festival this year. It now comes to NYC, with a Los Angeles run to follow next week.

Founded in 1868, St Benedict’s Prep is run by the monks of the Newark Abbey and operates according to the principles of the Rule of Saint Benedict, stressing community, trust, leadership, commitment, and several other virtues that have helped its predominantly African- and Latin-American students to succeed where so many other inner city schools instead see dismal drop out rates and underperformance. Monks go through each of these principles at length through the course of the Bongiornos’ film, offering practical lessons for how they apply them to their students and their particular circumstances – often involving broken homes, the lack of male role models, gangs, and the like. While students are heard from on occasion, more of their voices would have helped to cement the effectiveness of the pedadogy. Instead, intermittently, the filmmakers interject with crude animation and strange computer-voiced factoids which unfortunately cheapen the proceedings as a whole. Similarly, an extended consideration of the school’s history would be welcome – what’s related here – the internal schism that came after the 1967 Newark riots and eventually led to the closure of the school and the exodus of several of the monks – is more intriguing than the rule play-by-play offered instead.

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On DVD: TEENAGE

teenageComing to DVD next Tuesday, September 9: TEENAGE

Matt Wolf’s meditation on the emergence of the teenager premiered at Tribeca last year. It went on to Hot Docs, AFI Docs, Melbourne, Traverse City, BFI London, DMZ Docs, Hot Springs, CPH:DOX, Denver, and Big Sky, among others.

I included the doc in my Tribeca coverage here.

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On TV: THE GENIUS OF MARIAN

genius of marianComing to PBS’s POV this coming Monday, September 8: THE GENIUS OF MARIAN

Banker White and Anna Fitch’s reckoning with Alzheimer’s disease made its debut at Tribeca last year. It went on to screen at IFF Boston, Berkshire, AFI Docs, Sebastopol Doc, Heartland, Woods Hole, and Moscow.

I included the doc in my Tribeca coverage here.

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Special Screening: FIRST TO FALL

first to fallComing to NYC’s Bronx Documentary Center this Saturday, September 6: FIRST TO FALL

Rachel Beth Anderson and Tim Grucza’s portrait of Libyan expatriates turned rebels debuted at IDFA last year. It has gone on to screen at Human Rights Watch, Biografilm, Hot Springs Doc, Beirut, and Rio, among other events. This special screening, in collaboration with Reporters Instructed in Saving Colleagues (RISC), serves as a fundraiser in memory of slain journalist James Foley.

Clued in via social media to the popular uprising against Muammar Gaddafi and the dictator’s brutal retaliation, Hamid and Tarek, young Libyans living in Montreal, decide to head to Benghazi to join the action. Despite having no combat training, they joke while enjoying chocolate snacks upon their arrival that they’ll get by on their experience playing video games – a signal of their youth and naïveté which will soon be put to the test. Hamid is permitted to travel to Misrata, where he’ll train, while the more portly, younger Tarek is forced to stay behind, initially unable to realize his “dream” of battle. While there’s appeal in the scenes showcasing the young men’s friendship, full of both moments of tenderness and puerile mockery, their time apart underscores how they cope with, and come of age against, the danger they’ve thrust themselves into. Anderson and Grucza follow their separate tracks for several months, as Hamid’s attempts to use humor and bravado eventually give way to disillusionment, while Tarek, finally reunited with his friend, shows more vulnerability and apprehension, yet ultimately risks his safety to try to see his family in another city, with sobering results.

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