Category Archives: Film

Special Screenings: I AM BREATHING

i am breathingComing to Brooklyn’s UnionDocs, as well as more than 170 events in more than 35 additional countries, today, Friday, June 21: I AM BREATHING

Emma Davie and Morag McKinnon’s moving portrait of a husband and father coming to terms with the end of his life debuted at IDFA last year. It went on to screen at True/False, Hot Docs, Documentary Edge, ZagrebDox, DocPoint, DOK.fest Munich, DocsBarcelona, RiverRun, Cleveland, and Edinburgh before its Global Screening Day today.

I wrote about the doc out of IDFA here.

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On TV & In Theatres: HOMEGOINGS

homegoingsComing to PBS’s POV and to NYC’s Maysles Cinema next Monday, June 24: HOMEGOINGS

Christine Turner’s look at African American approaches to funerals and death made its debut at MoMA’s Documentary Fortnight this past Winter. It has gone on to screen at Full Frame and the American Black Film Festival before its broadcast and theatrical release next week.

Isaiah Owens has had a strange affinity for funerals since he was a child, holding make-believe funerals as a regular pastime. He turned this interest into his career, running the Owens Funeral Home in Harlem (and South Carolina) for more than four decades. Owens and his family cater to an African American clientele, providing Turner with the opportunity to explore the way death is often viewed in this community. Marking a passage back home, the funerals that Owens arranges for his clients represent both a vehicle through which to mourn as well as a celebration of their lives for family and friends. Turner demonstrates this by spotlighting several funerals through the course of the film, as well as the arrangements one woman makes for her own eventual passing. Archival photos and interviews with Owens reveal the rich tradition and history of African American undertakers and funeral directors, who filled a need in their communities in a time when segregation and racism meant that white practitioners refused to serve black families. Owens is a very appealing protagonist, a man in love with, and deeply respectful of, his often misunderstood profession, making for an insightful and intriguing film.

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Special Screening: THE GENIUS OF MARIAN

genius of marianComing to NYC’s Rooftop Films next Tuesday, June 25: THE GENIUS OF MARIAN

Banker White and Anna Fitch’s intimate story about the impact of Alzheimer’s on a family had its world premiere at Tribeca this past Spring. The film’s fest circuit has included IFF Boston, Berkshire, and the upcoming AFI Docs and Moscow.

I included the doc in my Tribeca coverage here.

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Indiewire @ Hulu Docs: Inside Washington

AFI Docs, formerly known as Silverdocs, began last night, shifting its focus from Silver Spring MD to Washington DC. To commemorate this change, my latest curated selections for Hulu’s Documentaries offers an insider look at politics and the nation’s capital. Watch these docs now for free!

For more information about the selections, see my Indiewire article.

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On TV & Online: UNMISTAKEN CHILD

unmistaken childComing to WORLD Channel’s Global Voices series this Sunday, June 23: UNMISTAKEN CHILD

Nati Baratz’s chronicle of a Tibetan monk’s search for his master’s reincarnation had its premiere at Toronto in 2008. It went on to screen at Berlin, Haifa, Full Frame, RiverRun, IFF Boston, Flahertiana, San Francisco, Seattle, and Thessaloniki Doc, among others, picking up several awards along the way. After its broadcast, the doc will be available for a limited time on WORLD’s website.

As a young boy, Tenzin Zopa, himself a reincarnated master, left his parents to study and assume his spiritual duties at the side of his master, Geshe Lama Konchog. Decades later, after Lama Konchog passes, the devoted Zopa is tasked by the Dalai Lama to locate his beloved master’s reincarnation – but he must do so before the child and his earthly parents form too close of a bond, preventing his easy transfer to the monk’s care. Zopa sets out on what will be a four-year journey to investigate reports of unusual recently-born children in hopes of identifying Lama Konchog’s new incarnation. Baratz’s intimate camera follows the nervous young monk, revealing the fascinating tests and ceremonies used to determine if he’s found his lost master, while also creating a beautiful, at times transcendent, travelogue of Nepal. Remaining strictly observational, Baratz leaves it to the viewer to wonder about some of the thornier issues that arise around the core goal of separating a young child from his parents, and to ask questions about faith and tradition.

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On Cable: DARK GIRLS

Dark-Girls-5Coming to OWN this Sunday, June 23: DARK GIRLS

Bill Duke and D Channsin Berry’s look at skin color prejudice within the African American community had its premiere at Toronto in 2011. It went on to screen at Los Angeles’ Pan African fest, Miami’s Black Film fest, and Nashville’s International Black Film fest, among others.

I included the doc in my Toronto coverage here.

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Edinburgh 2013: Documentary Overview

edinburgh-international-film-festival-2013Beginning tomorrow, Wednesday, June 19 and running through Sunday, June 30, the Edinburgh International Film Festival takes over Scotland’s capital city for its 67th edition. It’s the event’s second year under the stewardship of Artistic Director Chris Fujiwara. After the departure of the popular Hannah McGill in 2010, who had led the festival since 2006, Edinburgh suffered a critical lashing for a couple of editions presented without an artistic director until Fujiwara took over last year to set the ship aright. Out of the nearly 150 films screening this year, approximately 40 are documentary features or hybrids. Some highlights are included below: Continue reading

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In Theatres: DOWNLOADED

downloaded_documentary_a_lComing to NYC’s Village East Cinemas this Friday, June 21: DOWNLOADED

Alex Winter’s chronicle of the Napster story debuted at SXSW this past March. It’s since gone on to Cleveland, Hot Docs, Maryland, Martha’s Vineyard, IFF Boston, and Sydney, among others. The film expands to Los Angeles next Friday, June 28.

I included the doc in my SXSW coverage here.

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On DVD: THE SOURCE FAMILY

sourceComing to DVD today, Tuesday, June 18: THE SOURCE FAMILY

Maria Demopoulos and Jodi Wille’s look at the 1970s Los Angeles spiritual commune debuted at SXSW last year. Its fest circuit included Hot Docs, San Francisco, Seattle, and Silverdocs, among others, before going on to limited theatrical engagements around the country.

I previously wrote about the doc out of SXSW here.

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Frameline 2013: Documentary Overview

frameline37-san-francisco-international-lgbt-film-06Turning 37 this year, San Francisco’s Frameline is the undisputed daddy of US LGBT film festivals, annually offering the newest crop of US and international queer films for its large and loyal local audience, as well as for the scores of fest programmers and film fans that come from far afield to sample the “gay Cannes.” Beginning this Thursday, June 20, and running through Sunday, June 24 – always coinciding with the end of SF’s gay pride celebration – the festival will present more than 35 feature documentaries among its more than hundred selections, including the gala Centerpiece slot, Sundance alum VALENTINE ROAD. Among the other docs that Frameline’s expected 60,000 attendees can check out are the following: Continue reading

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