Heading into the final stretch of this year’s US Documentary Competition: Shaul Schwarz’s NARCO CULTURA, about the impact of Mexico’s drug wars on Mexican and Latino-American pop culture.
Category Archives: Film
2013 Sundance Docs in Focus: NARCO CULTURA
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
2013 Sundance Docs in Focus: MANHUNT: THE SEARCH FOR OSAMA BIN LADEN
The 2013 Sundance US Documentary Competition sees the premiere of alum Greg Barker’s newest film: MANHUNT: THE SEARCH FOR OSAMA BIN LADEN, tracing the CIA’s efforts to stop the al Qaeda mastermind.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
In Theatres: MY BROOKLYN
Coming to Brooklyn’s reRun Theater this Friday, January 4: MY BROOKLYN
Kelly Anderson and Allison Lirish Dean’s exploration of gentrification made its premiere at last year’s Brooklyn Film Festival, picking up an audience award. Since then, it has had a number of largely Brooklyn-focused community and grassroots screenings, as well as the Red Hook and Lund, Sweden’s International Architecture fests.
The film’s tagline, THE BATTLE FOR THE SOUL OF A CITY, signals both its personal and public focus, pointing out the wide-ranging social, cultural, and historical impact of gentrification on an area, and the passion the issue engenders from stakeholders on both sides of the debate. Anderson deliberately positions herself within this complex story of Brooklyn’s gentrification, both as an early gentrifier – moving to the borough in 1988 to take advantage of the cheaper rents – and as its victim – changes to her neighborhood pricing her out of her longtime home. As Anderson and her neighbors face the controversial redevelopment of the Fulton Mall – a consistently profitable shopping district with a cherished history that has long catered largely to the areas African American population – she profiles a number of the individuals whose livelihood and homes will be affected, while also candidly acknowledging the contradictory feelings she experiences about the proposed changes. Smartly, however, Anderson expands the scope of her film beyond the strictly personal – and beyond the specificity of Brooklyn – to consider the factors that come to play in gentrification in general, both historically and in the present: class, race, politics, economics, and, greed. The result is a film that intelligently confronts a phenomenon that is more and more common around the world, but one that many would rather not directly address.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Happy New Year!
I hope everyone had a safe and fun New Year’s Eve last night. In recognition of the holiday, w(n)td is taking a break from regular posting until tomorrow, when the film-by-film profiles of the 2013 Sundance Film Festival documentary line-up will resume. The US Documentary Competition will wrap up later this week – if you missed any, the series starts here. Happy 2013!
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Sundance
2013 Sundance Docs in Focus: LIFE ACCORDING TO SAM
Sundance 2013 welcomes back another pair of alumni filmmakers with the next US Documentary Competition title: Sean Fine and Andrea Nix Fine’s LIFE ACCORDING TO SAM, about one driven family’s mission to combat the rare disease threatening their young son.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
2013 Sundance Docs in Focus: INEQUALITY FOR ALL
Next up in the 2013 Sundance US Documentary Competition: Jacob Kornbluth’s INEQUALITY FOR ALL, in which former US Secretary of Labor Robert Reich explains the reasons for the widening gap between America’s 1% and the rest of us.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
2013 Sundance Docs in Focus: GOD LOVES UGANDA
Continuing my spotlight on the second half of the 2013 Sundance US Documentary Competition: GOD LOVES UGANDA, Roger Ross Williams’ exploration of American evangelicals’ coordinated ideological campaign in Uganda.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
2012 Top Ten Docs
Indiewire has posted the top ten lists of various film industry respondents, including mine. You can see the full list here.
Largely because non-fiction tends to be an afterthought in these types of end-of-the-year roundups, and because I frankly haven’t had a chance to see a lot of the acclaimed fiction films, my list is all documentaries. If I did include fiction films, I would have certainly listed BEASTS OF THE SOUTHERN WILD and AMOUR – but beyond that, I’d have to play a fair amount of catch up. As it is, however, there were several fantastic documentaries that I could have added to my list, so it’s probably best to keep it contained.
Here are pointers to what I’ve written about my top ten docs of 2012 on what (not) to doc in the past. They are unranked, and in alphabetical order:
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations
2013 Sundance Docs in Focus: GIDEON’S ARMY
Dawn Porter’s profile of three committed but often overwhelmed public defenders is the next film in my overview of Sundance’s US Documentary Competition: GIDEON’S ARMY
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
2013 Sundance Docs in Focus: DIRTY WARS
My look at the 2013 Sundance US Documentary Competition reaches the halfway point: Richard Rowley’s DIRTY WARS follows investigative journalist Jeremy Scahill as he uncovers the existence of America’s secret wars.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
