The 8th edition of DocsDF: The International Documentary Film Festival of Mexico City begins tomorrow, Thursday, October 24 and runs through Sunday, November 3. The fest screens more than 130 new and retrospective feature-length and short documentaries for audiences numbering over 30,000. Presenting a broad range of Mexican, Ibero-American, and international work, DocsDF aims to increase non-fiction awareness nationally, presenting Doctober, a touring program, throughout the month to every state of the country. What follows are some highlights from the various sections of the festival: Continue reading
Category Archives: Film
DocsDF 2013 Overview
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On Cable: BLACKFISH
Coming to CNN tomorrow, Thursday, October 24: BLACKFISH
Gabriela Cowperthwaite’s investigation into the plight of captive orcas had its world premiere at Sundance earlier this year. It has gone on to screen at Nantucket, Seattle, Sarasota, Vancouver, Provincetown, AFI Docs, Miami, Moscow, Melbourne, and Sydney, among others, and to enjoy a limited theatrical release this Summer.
I profiled the doc before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
Abu Dhabi 2013: Documentary Overview
This Thursday, October 24, sees the start of the Abu Dhabi Film Festival, which runs through Saturday, November 2nd. One of several film events to launch in the United Arab Emirates within the past decade, the fest began in 2007 as the Middle East International Film Festival before rebranding to its more geographically specific designation in 2010. This year’s edition, its seventh, promises nearly 100 features and over 70 shorts, representing more than 50 countries, and showing a particular emphasis on work from the Arab world. Among this line-up are 20 feature documentaries reflecting a mix of internationally recognized films from festivals like Cannes, Sundance, Venice, and Tribeca, as well as several premieres.
Abu Dhabi’s Documentary Competition includes more than a dozen films, including a couple of city symphonies: Sherief Elkatsha’s portrait of the Egyptian capital, CAIRO DRIVE; and Kasim Abid’s look at life on the streets of several Arab cities, WHISPERS OF THE CITIES. Geographical locations are also the concern of Francesco Conversano and Nene Grignaffini’s WALLS, a comparison of the territorial borders. Julie Bertuccelli’s SCHOOL OF BABEL (pictured) looks at the learning experiences of a diverse group of young immigrants to France. The personal cost of resistance and revolution is explored in both Hamza Aouni’s EL GORT, an intimate, multiple-year exploration of Tunisia before and after the revolution; and Mohammad Soueid’s HANGING DATES UNDER ALEPPO’S CITADEL, about a Syrian man’s personal stake in the ongoing Syrian uprising.
Feature docs also appear in the festival’s Showcase, a panorama of international films. Several of these are also eligible for the environmentally-themed Our World Competition, including, among others: Douglas Kass’ EMPTYING THE SKIES (pictured), following dedicated activists as they set out to halt illegal poaching that threatens songbirds with extinction; Raoul Peck’s FATAL ASSISTANCE, an exposé on failed humanitarian efforts in post-earthquake Haiti; and Lech Kowalski’s HOLY FIELD HOLY WAR, documenting the struggle between Polish farmers and encroaching fracking.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On VOD: TRASH DANCE
Coming to VOD today, Tuesday, October 22: TRASH DANCE
Andrew Garrison’s chronicle of the transformation of sanitation work into spectacle debuted at SXSW last year, where it received a special jury mention. It went on to screen at Full Frame, Silverdocs, and Woods Hole, picking up audience awards at each, as well as New Orleans, DocuWest, Warsaw, Heartland, DOXA, Lincoln Center’s Dance on Camera, and Sedona, among others. The Orchard now releases the film on iTunes, Amazon, Xbox, Google Play, and Vudu.
Set in Austin TX, Garrison’s film follows an unexpected collaboration between choreographer Allison Orr and the city’s sanitation department that results in a one-night only mechanistic ballet of garbage trucks and the unheralded workers who keep the city clean. While the sold-out performance serves as the successful end of Orr’s project, what’s equally, or perhaps more, compelling are her research ridealongs and interviews with the skeptical, primarily African American and Latino/a garbagemen and -women whom she tries to convince to participate in the unorthodox project. To paraphrase one of the men, “what does this short-haired white lady want with us?” Orr’s full answer is wisely withheld until the film’s end, allowing the audience to recognize for themselves her motives in shining a spotlight on an often denigrated, but absolutely essential profession.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
On DVD: FAR OUT ISN’T FAR ENOUGH
Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, October 22: FAR OUT ISN’T FAR ENOUGH: THE TOMI UNGERER STORY
Brad Bernstein’s look at the renegade children’s book author had its world premiere at Toronto last year. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, Seattle, Rome, Nashville, Florida, Warsaw, Deauville, Haifa, and RIDM, among others.
I previously wrote about the doc out of Toronto here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
In Theatres: I AM DIVINE
Coming to theatres this Friday, October 25: I AM DIVINE
Jeffrey Schwarz’s loving tribute to Harris Glenn Milstead AKA Divine made its world premiere at SXSW earlier this year. Its extensive festival run has included several LGBT fests (including London, Tampa, Miami, Boston, Inside Out, Tel Aviv, Frameline, and Outfest), New Orleans’ Film-O-Rama, Cleveland, Florida, Nashville, DOXA, Sheffield, Sydney, Provincetown, Durban, and Melbourne, among many others.
Divine was John Waters’ muse, described by the King of Bad Taste as “the most beautiful woman in the world, almost,” and starred in his films until the performer’s early death in 1988. Still notorious for the infamous last scene at the end of PINK FLAMINGOS, a film predicated on a contest to determine “the filthiest person alive,” Divine has maintained cult celebrity status more than two decades after his death. Schwarz, who has previously lauded other outsized personalities from film history, such as horror director William Castle in SPINE TINGLER!, pornstar Jack Wrangler in WRANGLER, and LGBT film historian and activist Vito Russo in VITO, tells the performer’s definitive story, revealing how a boy who was bullied as an overweight sissy in high school found a family of like-minded outsiders among Baltimore’s countercultural scene of the 1960s, including nascent filmmaker Waters, who gave him his famed Genet-inspired sobriquet, and launched the inimitable Divine into unlikely stardom. Featuring interviews with friends like Waters and co-stars Ricki Lake, Mink Stole, and Tab Hunter, Schwarz’s film goes beyond the shock tactics of Divine’s stage persona to reveal the man beneath the makeup.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
On DVD: SHEPARD & DARK
Coming to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, October 22: SHEPARD & DARK
Treva Wurmfeld’s look at a longstanding male friendship made its world premiere at Toronto last year. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, Cannes, Cleveland, Big Sky, San Francisco, and Woodstock, among others, before enjoying a limited theatrical release.
I previously wrote about the film out of Toronto here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Special Screening: THE NEW PUBLIC
Coming to NYC’s Stranger Than Fiction series tomorrow, Tuesday, October 22: THE NEW PUBLIC
Jyllian Gunther’s in-depth look at the potential and challenges of an alternative high school debuted at the Hamptons last year. It has gone on to screen at Urbanworld, African Diaspora, deadCENTER, Hot Springs, Boulder, and the San Francisco Doc fests, among others.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Note: Gunther will be present for a Q&A after the screening.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations
On Cable: ALIAS RUBY BLADE
Coming to Al Jazeera America Presents this Sunday, October 20: ALIAS RUBY BLADE
Alex Meillier’s look at love and espionage in East Timor had its world premiere at IDFA last year. It’s gone on to screen at Tribeca, Montclair, Planete+ Doc, Biografilm, and United Nations Association Film Festival, among others.
I included the doc in my IDFA coverage here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
On Cable: BIG SHOT
Coming to ESPN’s 30 for 30 series this coming Tuesday, October 22: BIG SHOT
Kevin Connolly’s revisitation of an infamous hockey scandal debuted at Tribeca this past Spring. It went on to screen at the Hamptons and Dallas’ USA Film Festival.
I previously wrote about the doc out of Tribeca here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
