The New Orleans Film Festival presents its 23rd edition beginning this Thursday, October 11 and running for the next eight days. The event is clearly on the rise, witnessing a dramatic increase in submissions, and drawing higher profile films, industry attendance, and sponsors. I’ve only attended once, bringing THE CANAL STREET MADAM there for a hometown screening in 2010, but I echo MovieMaker Magazine in recommending NOFF as a “festival worth the entry fee” for its fantastic staff and amazing setting. Continue reading
Category Archives: Film
New Orleans Film Festival 2012: Documentary Overview
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On DVD: 11/4/08
Now available on DVD via Amazon: 11/4/08
Jeff Deutchman’s participatory doc on the historic 2008 US Presidential election made its world premiere at SXSW in 2010. It screened at Sarasota, Traverse City, Chicago, and at theatres across the country for a special one-night only event.
I previously wrote about the film here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Woodstock 2012: Documentary Overview
With the tagline “fiercely independent,” the Woodstock Film Festival annually draws from the countercultural spirit and storied musical and artistic history of Woodstock and the Hudson Valley region of upstate New York to present a cross-section of over one hundred films for local area residents and city dwellers looking for a getaway. This year’s event, which begins Wednesday and runs through Sunday, October 14, marks its 13th edition. Close to 60 feature length films will screen, as well as scores of shorts, panels, musical performances, and other special events.
Twenty-five feature docs are part of the lineup, including both the opening film, DEAR GOVERNOR CUOMO…, Jon Bowermaster’s documentation of a musical event/demonstration by New Yorkers against hydrofracking that took place this past May; and the closing night film, CASTING BY (pictured), Tom Donahue’s appreciation and exploration of the craft of the casting director.
Among the festival’s world premieres are a number of docs, including Marco Antonio Orsini’s DINNER AT THE NO-GOS (pictured), detailing what happens when the director and his Muslim producer host dinner parties to talk politics and religion in a number of countries on the US State Department’s Travel Advisory List; Barbara Kopple’s FIGHT TO LIVE, an exploration of the FDA’s drug approval process and the efforts of some to acquire non-FDA approved drugs to manage their incurable conditions; Dan Habib’s WHO CARES ABOUT KELSEY, following a troubled teen as she struggles to graduate from high school; and Rasmus Dinesen’s THE WORLD’S FINEST CHEF, a look at the preparation a renowned chef makes for one of the world’s most prestigious cooking competitions.
Other documentaries screening at Woodstock include Jamie Meltzer’s INFORMANT (pictured), a fascinating insider’s perspective on Katrina activist turned federal informant Brandon Darby; Anton Verstakov’s ROLAN MAKES MOVIES, a portrait of a zero-budget amateur filmmaker in Siberia; Walter Matteson’s PRETTY OLD, profiling the annual MS Senior Sweetheart Pageant and a number of its spry contestants; and Francis Hanly’s MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR REVISITED, about the circumstances behind the production and controversial reception of the Beatles’ film.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews
On TV: IF A TREE FALLS
Coming to POV for an encore presentation this Thursday, October 11: IF A TREE FALLS: A STORY OF THE EARTH LIBERATION FRONT
Marshall Curry and Sam Cullman’s investigation into the radical environmental group ELF won the Best Documentary Editing jury prize at its world premiere at Sundance last year. Its extensive festival tour included Traverse City, Nashville, Dallas, Silverdocs, Full Frame, Sheffield, and Hot Docs, and it also was one of the docs shortlisted for the Oscar.
I profiled the film before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Sundance
In the Works: MAN OF THE MONKEY
A filmmaker sets out to investigate the legend of a Nazi war criminal hiding out on a remote Brazilian island… with a chimpanzee bride.
Filmmaker David Romberg grew up in Brazil’s Ilha Grande, where his father sought refuge from political persecution in his native Argentina. As a boy, he was told of the local bogeyman, a hermit inhabiting the other side of the island who, it was said, had taken a female chimp as a wife. Years later, Romberg returns to the island to seek out the truth behind this bizarre legend, and discovers strange parallels between his family’s story, that of other political dissidents who made the island their home during the tumultuous 1970s, and that of the “Man of the Monkey” – a Nazi who escaped persecution at the end of WWII. Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, In the Works
In Theatres: IN MY MOTHER’S ARMS
Coming to NYC’s Maysles Cinema for its US theatrical premiere beginning this Monday, October 8: IN MY MOTHER’S ARMS
Atea Al-Daradji and Mohamed Al-Daradji’s intimate look at an Iraqi orphanage premiered at Toronto last year. It went on to screen at CPH:DOX, Thessaloniki Doc, San Francisco, Abu Dhabi, and Planete Doc Review.
The Al-Daradji brothers spend over two years following Husham, a man of modest means who has taken on the role of surrogate father to a group of more than thirty young orphans in Baghdad. All too aware of the dangers facing children on the streets – potential recruits into criminal or terrorist groups – or in the few state-sponsored institutions – potential victims of violence and sexual abuse – Husham sets up a de facto orphanage , renting a small house to provide shelter and safety for war orphans. Some of his charges are specifically singled out – unsurprisingly, because of the traumas that they have experienced, Sallah remains mute, Saif has anger issues, and Mohammed struggles with school though he is surprisingly on a competitive diving team. Spread thin, Husham, who already finds it hard to secure sufficient help or financing for his orphanage, soon faces imminent eviction. The film presents the orphanage in an appropriately raw and gritty light, allowing the viewer to become immersed in the children’s experiences, and generating undeniable empathy for Husham. Still, his task is decidedly Sisyphean – hanging over the film is the knowledge that, while his efforts are heartfelt, they are extremely limited – making this less a portrait of an inspirational change maker, and more an alarm calling for larger efforts to provide better lives to the thousands a single man cannot save.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
On TV & VOD: 9.79*
Coming to ESPN next Tuesday, October 9 and to VOD next Wednesday, October 10: 9.79*
Daniel Gordon’s examination of the legendary steroid controversy of the Seoul Olympics made its premiere last mont at Toronto. The film now makes its broadcast premiere as part of the sports network’s acclaimed 30 FOR 30 documentary series the day before it becomes available on iTunes.
I included the film in my Toronto roundup here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
On VOD: NEXT YEAR COUNTRY
Now available on VOD through Amazon: NEXT YEAR COUNTRY
Joseph Aguirre’s look at an unusual response to a long Montana drought had its world premiere at the 2010 Big Sky Documentary Film Festival, where it also picked up an award. It also claimed an award at DocuWest, screened at other fests in Wyoming and Santa Cruz, and was broadcast by a number of PBS stations in the Summer of 2010. It’s been brought to VOD by FilmBuff beginning this week.
In Montana, where a drought has endangered farm operations and people’s livelihoods more or less since 1985, some farm families are pushed to desperate measures. The Fuhrmans seek the help of Matt Ryan, a rainmaker, who has hired his services out, helping unblock nature to regulate itself and encourage rain production. After Ryan’s apparent success at the Fuhrman’s, media reports lead to both enthusiasm from others in nearby communities, and deep skepticism from others when they learn of his price tag. In a land besieged by harsh weather conditions, Ryan brings hope to some, appealing to the farmers’ and ranchers’ eternal optimism that next year could be better. Aguirre’s portrait is well-constructed, offering audiences a glimpse at a pace and way of life that’s both individualistic and yet also inescapably tied to nature.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Special Screening: HERB & DOROTHY
Coming to NYC’s Stranger Than Fiction next Tuesday, October 9: HERB & DOROTHY
Megumi Sasaki’s portrait of a modest pair of art collectors premiered at Silverdocs in 2008, picking up an audience award. Additional awards were picked up at Provincetown, Philadelphia, and Hamptons during its popular festival run.
If you saw them on the street, Herb and Dorothy Vogel would probably just look like an ordinary older NYC couple. He worked as a postal clerk, while she worked as a librarian. What wasn’t apparent on the surface is that their one-bedroom apartment was stuffed to the gills with a most remarkable collection of contemporary art, quietly amassed, piece by piece, since the early 1960s, using Herb’s salary while they lived on Dorothy’s. Limited only by a sense that the work should be affordable – given their modest means – and that it should fit in their apartment – ever practical – the Vogels were amongst the earliest collectors of some of the now-acknowledged masters of minimalist and conceptual art. Filmmaker Sasaki tells the Vogels story, hearing not only from the couple as they reflect on their collection and the New York art scene of the past four decades, but also from artists such as Chuck Close and Christo, curators, and art historians who make it clear that the Vogels have a discerning aesthetic sense. There’s a natural warmth to the film, matching the couple’s rapport with one another borne out of a long life together, and a charming aspirational sense imparted that art should be and can be open to anyone to appreciate and collect.
Sadly, Herb passed away this July, but his legacy will live on in Sasaki’s upcoming follow up project, HERB & DOROTHY 50X50, an exploration of the Vogel Collection and their plan to gift fifty pieces of art to a museum in each state – a staggering 2500 works out of the more than 4700 they’ve collected. Both Megumi Sasaki and Dorothy Vogel will be on hand at the screening for a Q&A session.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations
On DVD: SHUT UP AND PLAY THE HITS
Coming to DVD next Tuesday, October 9: SHUT UP AND PLAY THE HITS
Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace’s look at the end of LCD Soundsystem made its world premiere at Sundance. Its festival circuit took it to Sundance London, SXSW, Ambulante, and Hot Docs, among others, and it played around the country in special one or two night engagements this July.
I profiled the film before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
