The 10th anniversary edition of Silverdocs begins next Monday, June 18 and runs through Sunday, June 24 just outside of Washington DC in Silver Spring MD. In addition to screenings of over one hundred feature and short documentaries, the festival holds a corresponding Conference presenting over 35 panels and workshops, as well as networking opportunities, for attending filmmakers and industry representatives. I’m serving as one of the guest curators for the Conference for a second year – the five panels I’ve organized are noted below – in addition to serving on the festival’s shorts jury and covering the event for Indiewire, so I’m looking forward to attending again. Continue reading
Category Archives: Film
Silverdocs 2012 Overview
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On DVD/VOD: THE BIG FIX
Coming to DVD and VOD next Tuesday, June 19: THE BIG FIX
Josh Tickell and Rebecca Harrell Tickell’s indictment of Big Oil in the face of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil disaster made its world premiere at Cannes last year. It went on to screen, fittingly, as the opening night film at the New Orleans Film Festival, as well as at Washington DC’s Environmental Film Festival, LA’s WorldFest, and Turin’s Italian Environmental Film Festival, among others. In addition, it has had limited theatrical runs in NYC and LA.
On April 22, 2010, an accident at the Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig resulted in an environmental catastrophe – five continuous months of crude oil spilled into the Gulf of Mexico, devastating and perhaps irreparably damaging the marine life and the industry that depends on it. The Tickells use this tragic incident to review and expose the troublesome track record of the multinational oil company BP, putting forth a damning argument that the state of Louisiana long ago became little more than an oil colony of the US, the sacrificial victim of corporate greed and power that has put profit above concern for marine or human life. But the filmmakers don’t stop at the Bayou State – they trace a web of corruption that encompasses the highest levels of government, powerful corporate lobbies, the destructive drive toward deregulation, and the subsequent crash of the economy – and this is where the film loses its way. It has huge aspirations, but trying to make all of these connections effectively fit together in one film never completely works, and the doc ends up both losing a sense of focus and becoming overwhelmingly bleak. Still, other aspects do succeed, especially the uncovering of BP’s continued use of harmful dispersants they pledged to discontinue, and the impact these chemicals have had not only on the Louisianan residents, but on Harrell Tickell herself. As a call to arms, the film should enrage viewers, and motivate them to ask important questions about the ability of Big Oil to get away with disastrous practices and how they can instead be held accountable.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
Frameline 2012: Documentary Overview
The oldest LGBT film festival in the world, Frameline, begins its 36th edition tomorrow, June 14 and runs through the end of San Francisco’s gay pride, Sunday, June 24. Affectionately described by many attendees as “the Cannes of gay film festivals,” Frameline’s annual presentation of the newest US and international queer work essentially takes over San Francisco, drawing locals as well as filmmakers, fans, and industry from all over the world. Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews
On DVD: A MATTER OF TASTE
Coming to DVD next Tuesday, June 19: A MATTER OF TASTE: SERVING UP PAUL LIEBRANDT
Sally Rowe’s portrait of the wunderkind chef made its world premiere at SXSW last year. Its festival circuit included, among others, Cleveland, Florida, Sonoma, Full Frame, Tribeca, Seattle, Doxa, Bergen, and Nashville, where it claimed a special jury prize. It was broadcast nationally on HBO last Summer.
I wrote about the film out of SXSW here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
In Theatres: CHELY WRIGHT: WISH ME AWAY
Now in theatres, and opening in LA’s Laemmle Music Hall this Friday, June 15: CHELY WRIGHT: WISH ME AWAY
Bobbie Birleffi and Beverly Kopf’s intimate portrait of the coming out of the first major country western musician had its world premiere at last year’s Los Angeles Film Festival just days before screening at Frameline – picking up best documentary feature awards at both. The film has won additional jury and audience awards since, including (fittingly) Nashville, Palm Springs, Seattle LGBT, Philadelphia Q Fest, and Atlanta’s Out on Film, among others. Fest appearances continue even as distributor First Run Features has begun rolling the film out in theatres beginning earlier this month.
Birleffi and Kopf followed the appealing Wright over three years as she finalizes her plans to come out publicly as a lesbian after sixteen years as a Nashville recording artist. Offering at the same time both the private and public sides of this pivotal moment – Wright’s video diary confessions of anxieties and insecurities weighed against the media training she receives to be able to discuss coming out on THE TODAY SHOW or OPRAH – the film achieves something quite a bit different from the typical coming out doc that’s well known to most LGBT film fans. While I confess to not having had a clue who Wright was before hearing about this film – country music is not my thing – I appreciated the unusual and delicate balancing act the subject has had to play between her celebrity and her authentic sexuality, especially in a genre that is largely synonymous with the conservative Bible Belt, and whose fans have already historically not taken too well to its stars going against the grain (ie The Dixie Chicks backlash). So while a cynical reading of the doc can view it as just another part of her carefully orchestrated public coming out process – which included a new album and a biography, beyond the TV interviews – it really is much more, and provides a rare point of access to the double-edged world of fame.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
In Theatres: EL VELADOR
Coming to NYC’s MoMA for a one-week run beginning tomorrow, Thursday, June 14: EL VELADOR
Natalia Almada’s lyrical meditation on life and death premiered at New Directors/New Films last year. It’s had an extensive festival career, with screenings at Cannes, Los Angeles, Silverdocs, FIDM, Jihlava, and IDFA, among others.
I wrote about the doc out of Silverdocs here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Los Angeles Film Festival 2012: Documentary Overview
Beginning this Thursday, June 14 and running through Sunday, June 24, the Los Angeles Film Festival is expected to reach more than 92,000 attendees in the heart of the film industry. A program of Film Independent, LAFF showcases independent film while also serving as a popular launching pad for high-profile studio productions. I’ve never had the opportunity to attend the event but always look forward to checking out their lineup. Among the more than 70 feature-length films screening during the fest’s 18th edition are 25 documentaries, presented in a juried competition section as well as a few other strands. Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
On VOD: THE NEW BLOOD
Now available on SnagFilms: THE NEW BLOOD
Ben Gonyo’s portrait of aspiring no-budget filmmakers premiered in its hometown of Rochester NY last year. In addition to appearing on Snag, the film made its broadcast premiere on the Documentary Channel in time for Halloween last year.
With echoes of Chris Smith’s AMERICAN MOVIE, Michael Paul Stephenson’s BEST WORST MOVIE, and the recent JOURNEY TO PLANET X, Gonyo’s film introduces audiences, whether they’re ready or not, to the world of Mike, Lou, and Lawrence, a trio of Rochester-based filmmaking wiseguys. Their basement-made – and frankly inept – horror films from Mike’s “Twilighted Side Productions” (with Mike attempting to introduce on-screen à la Rod Serling) have titles like RIDE TO THE MORGUE and THE DEADLY CAMPING GAME and have appeared on local public access channels – the filmmakers naively believing that this exposure will somehow allow them to break into Hollywood. Gonyo follows the men over two years, giving an all-too-clear sense of the trainwreck-fascinating appeal of their work while also allowing them to elaborate on why they think their unique talents belong in the mainstream. While the film is undeniably enjoyable and often very funny, it skirts a very fine line between bemused affection for its subjects and mockery, which may leave some viewers uneasy. Still, as far as documentary subjects go, Gonyo’s underdogs are people viewers will want to watch.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Human Rights Watch Film Festival 2012: Documentary Overview
The New York edition of the Human Rights Watch Film Festival returns to the Film Society of Lincoln Center for its 23rd year this Thursday, June 14 and runs through Thursday, June 28. Sixteen films will expose audiences to pressing human rights issues around the world, providing audiences with an opportunity to engage with important issues through personal stories. Thirteen of the selections are documentary features, with programming focused around five key themes: Continue reading
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Overviews, Recommendations
In Theatres: SOMETHING FROM NOTHING: THE ART OF RAP
Coming to theatres this Friday, June 15: SOMETHING FROM NOTHING: THE ART OF RAP
Ice-T (with co-director Andy Baybutt)’s exploration of hip hop creativity made its world premiere earlier this year at Sundance. Indomina picked up the doc out of the festival for a release this Summer.
I profiled the film before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
