Category Archives: Film

On DVD: SOMEWHERE BETWEEN

Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, February 5: SOMEWHERE BETWEEN

Linda Goldstein Knowlton’s exploration of cross-cultural adoption made its premiere at Hot Docs in 2011, where it won an audience award. Its festival circuit has included Vancouver, Los Angeles, Milwaukee, Portland, and Sidewalk, among others. It continues to play around the US via theatrical screenings organized via Tugg.

I wrote about the doc out of Hot Docs here.

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On VOD: CONNECTED

Coming to VOD today, Tuesday, February 5: CONNECTED

Tiffany Schlain’s personal meditation on our (inter)dependence on technology premiered at Sundance in 2011. Since then, it has screened extensively at fests around the world, enjoyed a limited theatrical release, and picked up numerous awards, including from Tribeca, National Geographic, and Berlin. The doc becomes available via iTunes today.

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

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On DVD/VOD & On TV: AS GOES JANESVILLE

as goes janesvilleAvailable on DVD/VOD and screening tonight on PBS’ Independent Lens: AS GOES JANESVILLE

Brad Lichtenstein’s look at the wide-ranging impact of the closure of a GM plant premiered on Independent Lens last October. In addition to its national broadcast, the doc’s festival run has included Chicago, Milwaukee, Albuquerque, Kansas, and Oregon, with Big Sky coming up this month. FilmBuff has made the film available on VOD platforms including iTunes, Amazon, YouTube, Vudu, Roxionow, Xbox, and Playstation.

Lichtenstein exposes the US financial crisis in microcosm, focusing on a small Wisconsin town over three years, beginning in 2009. Faced with the closure of a long-standing, job-providing GM auto plant, Janesville’s citizens are facing desperate times. While some workers are able to keep their jobs, they’re essentially forced to relocate or lose all their benefits, leading to subjects like Angie and Gayle leaving their families in order to provide for them. Others, like Cindy, depend on unemployment and federally-funded re-education programs, in the hopes that they’ll be able to find better jobs in the end. Meanwhile, local business leaders try to kickstart the economy by banding together to woo new enterprises to set up shop in their town, promising costly incentives in the form of tax breaks and reduced regulation. In the midst of this, Republican Governor Scott Walker begins his all-out assault on unions, precipitating massive protests and a divisive recall election. Balancing multiple threads, Lichtenstein’s eye-opening doc reveals the heavy price of partisan politics, corporate greed, and failed economic policies – with the average citizen left wondering how s/he will pay the bills.

Tied to tonight’s Independent Lens’ re-broadcast is the launch of BizVizz, a new iPhone app aiming to provide citizens with information about corporate accountability. Featuring 300 companies and nearly 1000 brands, the app displays a corporation’s tax data, government subsidies, and campaign donation records, helping consumers who want more transparency from the businesses they support. For more information about the app or to download it, visit its website.

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Online: PIONEERS OF THIRTEEN

pioneers of thirteenNow available to view online: PIONEERS OF THIRTEENepisode 1: THE ’60S – EXPERIMENTAL DAYS and episode 2: THE ’70S – BOLD AND FEARLESS

Celebrating the 50th anniversary of PBS’ flagship station, Thirteen/WNET, this four-part series, executive produced by Julie Anderson and produced by Charlotte Mangin and Denise A Greene, delves into the channel’s groundbreaking history, decade by decade. The first episode, focusing on the 1960s, originally aired last September, while the episode on the 1970s, the decade that helped define what Thirteen is to many viewers, just premiered last week. The 1980s episode is scheduled for June, while the 1990s is slated for September. The first two episodes in full are now available online at the links in the paragraph above.

Pioneers-JGCAt once a tribute to an American institution, a nostalgic look back at our childhoods, and a fascinating history of a scrappy and unlikely television innovator, the series draws from Thirteen’s storied ranks to reveal how the US developed public television in the 1960s. The subtitle of the first episode, EXPERIMENTAL DAYS, suggests the trial and error nature of that initial decade, as the station aired its first broadcast in 1962 against the backdrop of a minuscule budget and much-needed handouts from the other television networks. But as Thirteen’s programming excelled, winning over viewers and critics, and netting awards in the process, it replaced hand-me-downs with governmental and foundation grants, and championed public affairs programming that solidified public television’s reputation for quality, vital programming. From the perspective of the history of non-fiction, Thirteen supported and showcased the work of Frederick Wiseman, the Maysles brothers, and Margaret Mead, while its Public Broadcast Laboratory brought exciting experimental and innovative programming to the airwaves, including BLACK JOURNAL, and workshops to train minorities for careers in film and television. Thirteen capped off its first decade with the development and premiere of its signature series, SESAME STREET, revolutionizing children’s educational programming with the Muppets that are beloved to this day.

american familyThe second episode, BOLD AND FEARLESS, sees Thirteen go nationwide before the end of 1970, with an influx of funding for innovative programming. Interviews and archival clips revisit such pioneering series as the controversial satirical variety show, THE GREAT AMERICAN DREAM MACHINE, produced by HBO Documentary Films’ Sheila Nevins, and PBS’ first primetime hit before government interference led to its cancellation; candid public health programming such as VD BLUES; broadcasting the Watergate Senate hearings when the networks didn’t want to, for fear of losing advertising revenue; AN AMERICAN FAMILY (pictured), engrossing non-fiction programming in which America witnessed a marriage fall apart before their eyes, and saw the first openly gay character on television; the literacy promoting children’s series THE ELECTRIC COMPANY; the experimental arts workshop THE TV LAB; and the indepth profiles of BILL MOYERS JOURNAL. The station championed diversity before it was a buzzword, seeing the value in exposing youth to different languages and cultures, expanding the SESAME STREET cast to include Spanish speakers; creating the first national bilingual Latino show, REALIDADES; and broadcasting the “Black TONIGHT SHOW,” SOUL. Thirteen also endeavored to expose America to the arts, airing programs on modern dance, ballet, opera, and theatre through its GREAT PERFORMANCES and other strands. These and other examples of Thirteen’s bold vision – which included the funding of the first US video documentaries made in postwar Vietnam and in Cuba – demonstrate public television’s instrumental role in shaping the nation’s experience of media, culture, and information. Both currently available episodes are worth a watch for the overview they provide of Thirteen’s rich history, and should prove especially useful to media studies programs in the coming years.

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On DVD: JOSEPH CAMPBELL AND THE POWER OF MYTH

joseph-campbellComing to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, February 5: JOSEPH CAMPBELL AND THE POWER OF MYTH WITH BILL MOYERS: 25TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION

The seminal six-part series pairing comparative mythology scholar and author Joseph Campbell and noted public television journalist Bill Moyers was originally broadcast on PBS in the summer of 1988. A companion book was released at the same time, expanding on the conversations from the documentary series.

The program, which has proven to be among PBS’ most popular, introduced Campbell and his simple but profound mantra, “Follow your bliss,” to millions. College students at Sarah Lawrence – where Campbell was on faculty – and on campuses around the US were already familiar with his writing, especially through his influential The Hero with a Thousand Faces, which popularized the concept of the hero’s journey and was a mainstay of comparative religion and mythology courses. In Moyers’ series, Campbell emerged as an open, kindly, octogenarian sage, a friendly grandfatherly figure whose every utterance was entrancing – demonstrating not only the titular power of myth but that of storytelling in general. As a high school freshman, my speech and debate coach, Barbara Weiss, had us watch the series as we prepared for the upcoming season. While she found value in what Campbell and Moyers were discussing, it was clear, given the nature of the extracurricular activity she oversaw, that Weiss especially wanted us to be entranced by how Campbell expressed himself, by the way that he could launch into fascinating example after fascinating example at the slightest nudge by Moyers. The program left its mark on me then, confirmed as I rewatched it on the occasion of Athena’s re-issue of the series, which includes all six one-hour episodes, new introductions by Moyers, the initial two-part 1981 BILL MOYERS JOURNAL interview between the men that inspired the series, and an interview with George Lucas on Campbell’s influence on his modern-day mythmaking in STAR WARS. There’s a natural rapport to the conversation that Campbell and Moyers have in the main series, an ease in the way they move from discussions of the hero archetype to the purposes served by myths, from considerations of various myths across different yet surprisingly similar historical cultures to the influence of myths in the modern day. Recorded just before Campbell’s death, Moyers’ interviews captured the elder’s wisdom and disseminated it beyond the halls of academia to the benefit of all who create and absorb stories.

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In Theatres: THE GATEKEEPERS

gatekeepersComing to theatres in NYC and Los Angeles today, Friday, February 1: THE GATEKEEPERS

Dror Moreh’s enthralling interviews with the former heads of Israel’s internal security made its premiere at the Jerusalem Film Festival last year. It went on to screen at Telluride, Toronto, and Sundance, and is one of the five finalists for the Best Documentary Oscar.

I wrote about the doc before Sundance here.

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In the Works: AN HONEST LIAR: THE AMAZING RANDI STORY

The co-writer/editor of BEING ELMO and the co-director/producer of SONS OF PERDITION move from Muppets and Mormons to magicians and mountebanks in this portrait of a man who’s made it his mission to expose charlatans… while keeping up to his own tricks.

honest liarJustin Weinstein and Tyler Measom explore the life and work of James “The Amazing” Randi, the famed octogenarian magician and mentalist who has turned his talents to exposing others who use similar tricks to take advantage of people. In the course of revealing their subject and his crusade, however, the filmmakers discover that Randi is implicated in a much larger, and more serious, deceit – his partner of a quarter century, Jose, is not who he says he is. Is Randi a hypocrite, aiding and abetting this fraud, or did the man who’s made it his business to unearth deception himself fall for this flimflam? Continue reading

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On Cable: MEA MAXIMA CULPA

Coming to HBO this Monday, February 4: MEA MAXIMA CULPA: SILENCE IN THE HOUSE OF GOD

Alex Gibney’s searing exposé of pedophilia in the Catholic Church premiered at Toronto last year. Subsequent fest exposure has included DOC NYC, London, Chicago, Woodstock, and the Hamptons. The doc was shortlisted for the Best Documentary Oscar after its theatrical release in November.

I wrote about the film out of Toronto here.

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SXSW 2013: Features Lineup Announced

sxsw 2013 filmHere’s a pointer to the initial list of feature-length non-fiction and fiction films screening at this year’s SXSW – Midnighters and Shorts will be announced next Wednesday, February 6, with panels to follow on Wednesday, February 13. Out of the 110 films announced today – culled by Janet Pierson and her team from over 2000 feature submissions – by my count, just shy of half are documentaries. Beyond the all-non-fiction Documentary Feature Competition and Documentary Spotlight, one or more docs appear in every section announced today (aside from the fiction-exclusive Narrative Feature Competition and Narrative Spotlight).

Following is the list of documentary features, broken down by section. For descriptions, check out the link above: Continue reading

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Special Screening: ZIPPER

Zipper-Film-Still-1-Photo-by-Amy-Nichoslon-580x300Coming to NYC’s Stranger Than Fiction next Tuesday, February 5: ZIPPER

Amy Nicholson’s exploration of the battle between Coney Island and developers had its world premiere at DOC NYC last year, where it also claimed a special jury prize. The film is also slated to screen at Big Sky next month as it continues its festival circuit.

I wrote about the film out of DOC NYC here.

Note: Director Nicholson will be in attendance for a post-screening Q&A.

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