Category Archives: Film

Indiewire @ Hulu Docs: Giving Back & Making An Impact

My latest curated selections for Hulu’s Documentaries page are now up. Watch these now for free and be inspired to volunteerism and activism.

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

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Indiewire @ Hulu Docs

Sundance 2013: Spotlight, Park City at Midnight, & New Frontier Announced

This post is just a pointer to the second of four lineup announcements for the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. This year’s selections in Spotlight, Park City at Midnight, and New Frontier may be found here.

The remaining non-competition sections – Premieres and Documentary Premieres – will be revealed on Monday, with Shorts to follow on Tuesday.

If you missed yesterday’s announcement, the US and World Cinema Documentary and Dramatic Competitions, plus NEXT, click here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance

On DVD: FAMILY PORTRAIT IN BLACK & WHITE

Coming to DVD next Tuesday, December 4: FAMILY PORTRAIT IN BLACK & WHITE

Julia Ivanova’s portrait of a Ukrainian woman and her biracial foster children premiered at last year’s Sundance. It went on to screen at the Hamptons, Vancouver, Cleveland, Los Angeles, and Hot Docs, among others.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance

In Theatres: LOVE, MARILYN

Coming to NYC’s Film Forum tomorrow, Friday, November 30: LOVE, MARILYN

Liz Garbus’ unique and star-studded profile of Marilyn Monroe made its premiere this Fall at Telluride and Toronto. The film also opened the Hamptons International Film Festival, and is slated to have its broadcast premiere on HBO.

I included the film in my Toronto roundup here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

Sundance 2013: Competition & NEXT Lineups Announced

Here’s a quick pointer to the initial lineup announcement for the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. The US and World Cinema Dramatic and Documentary Competitions, plus the NEXT section, are here. Check back tomorrow for the Spotlight, Park City at Midnight, and New Frontier sections, Monday for Premieres and Documentary Premieres, and Tuesday for Shorts.

1 Comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Sundance

In Theatres: DRIVERS WANTED

Coming to Brooklyn’s reRun Gastropub Theater this Friday, November 30: DRIVERS WANTED

Joshua Z Weinstein’s portrait of NYC taxi drivers made its premiere at Silverdocs this Summer. Its festival circuit has included DOK.Leipzig, the Southern Circuit Tour, and DOC NYC.

I previously wrote about the film in my coverage of Silverdocs for Indiewire, saying:
Cab drivers are the focus of Joshua Z Weinstein’s featurette, also a world premiere at Silverdocs. In less than an hour, Weinstein offers a glimpse at a Queens taxi service, from the affable owner who recruits drivers as they await their hacker license tests, to a 90-year-old experienced cabbie and a newcomer Asian immigrant trying to make ends meet. While one gets the sense that the story could be expanded, Weinstein succeeds in capturing the workings of a perhaps too-little understood common profession, while also revealing the impact of the Recession in an understated way.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

In Theatres: WALK AWAY RENEE

Coming to NYC’s IFC Center this Friday, November 30: WALK AWAY RENEE

Jonathan Caouette’s follow up to TARNATION had its world premiere at Cannes last year. The film has since screened at BAMcinemaFest, Poland’s New Horizon, Moscow, Outfest, and elsewhere.

I previously wrote about the film here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases

Margaret Mead 2012 Overview

This year’s edition of the Margaret Mead Film Festival comes a couple of weeks later in the calendar, running this Thursday, November 29 through Sunday, December 2. Hosted by the American Museum of Natural History, the US’s longest-running non-fiction event is organized this year around the theme “Whose Story Is It?” Continue reading

1 Comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews

IDFA 2012: Docs in Brief, Part Three

Following yesterday’s roundup of several of IDFA’s competition titles, today’s post wraps up my coverage of the 25th edition of the world’s largest documentary festival with a look at a number of films in IDFA’s non-competitive “Reflecting Images” sections. Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, In Brief, Recommendations

On DVD/VOD: BURNING IN THE SUN

Coming to DVD and VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, November 27: BURNING IN THE SUN

Cambria Matlow and Morgan Robinson’s profile of a young man’s efforts to develop a solar panel industry in Mali made its premiere at Santa Barbara in 2010 after a sneak at Rooftop Films in 2009. Its festival stops have included the Southern Circuit Tour, Woods Hole, Lone Star, the NY African Film Festival, a number of environmental fests, and select events in Ethiopia, Nigeria, and Egypt.

Matlow and Robinson follow Daniel Dembele, the charismatic and entrepreneurial son of a Malian father and an Italian mother, as he develops a plan to bring development to Mali while generating a profit for himself. Noting that rural communities are without electricity and even larger communities contend with regular periods of blackouts, he enlists the aid of solar power engineers to build a local industry in making and selling solar panels within Mali itself – ingeniously buying “broken” solar cell scraps from larger multinational corporations at a fraction of their normal cost. Dembele, who grew up watching his mother aid in the development of Mali through her NGO which provides wells to villages, sees his own Afriq-Power initiative as his way to continue her legacy but in his own way. Rather than simply giving his fellow countrymen solar power, he will teach them how to make solar cells – developing self-sufficiency rather than charity, and providing a means to combat poverty. The filmmakers have found an appealing main subject in Daniel, whose arguments around development are persuasive – evidenced in the example of the village of Banko, the first to benefit from Afriq-Power’s efforts, bringing electricity to their school and surprising results to their test scores.

Leave a comment

Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases