Category Archives: Recommendations

On DVD/VOD: ALMOST HOLY

ALMOST-HOLYComing to DVD and VOD this coming Tuesday, August 16: ALMOST HOLY

Steve Hoover’s look at a Ukrainian man with an unorthodox mission premiered at Tribeca last year. Screenings followed at IDFA, Hamptons, ZagrebDox, Tallinn Black Nights, Maryland, San Francisco DocFest, Sidewalk, Bergen, Portland, and One World, among other festivals.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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Sarajevo 2016: Documentary Overview

cfdb0c44d6883de8540b8e66e2e30d97_XLToday, Friday, August 12 kicks off the 22nd Sarajevo Film Festival, Bosnia and Herzegovina’s premier cinema event. Running through Saturday, August 20, the festival presents over 100 new features, among them nearly 40 works of nonfiction.

four passportsThe Documentary Competition, focused on work from the Balkans, includes such titles as: Mladen Kovacevic’s WALL OF DEATH, AND ALL THAT, a melancholy portrait of a motorcycle stunt-riding Serbian grandmother; Berke Bas and Melis Birder’s BAGLAR, about a Kurdish basketball team; Đorđe Čenić and Hermann Peseckas’ DOWN THERE, an autobiographical look back at Yugoslavian guest workers in Austria; Siniša Vidović’s KORIDA, an exploration of Bosnian bullfights; Mihajlo Jevtic’s FOUR PASSPORTS (pictured), a personal reflection on national identity and leaving home; and Tarik Hodžić’s SCREAM FOR ME SARAJEVO, which focuses on a music concert held against the odds in the midst of the siege of the capital – the latter also the subject of out of competition title THE SIEGE, by Rémy Ourdan and Patrick Chauvel.

sarajevo-rosesAmong the other nonfiction offerings elsewhere in the program are several titles in the national cinema showcase BH Film, including: Damir Pirić’s ROCK ‘N’ WAR… OR JUST BECAUSE IT’S FRIDAY, which details the importance of the wartime music scene in Bosnia; Roger M Richards’ SARAJEVO ROSES (pictured), a two decade long portrait of Sarajevo residents before, during, and after the war; Hari Šečić’s SEARCHING FOR HOME, a portrait of a Srebrenica survivor living as a refugee in the US; and Benjamin Dizdarević’s CUT, about a man on a mission to share his love of 35mm film.

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In Theatres: THE LOST ARCADE

lost_arcade-1465404120-726x388Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, August 12: THE LOST ARCADE

Kurt Vincent’s love letter to a famed NYC institution made its debut at DOC NYC last year. Other berths have included Rotterdam, IFF Boston, Melbourne, and the upcoming Sidewalk festival.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Chinatown Fair opened as a penny arcade on Mott Street in 1944. Over the decades, the dimly lit gathering place, known for its tic-tac-toe playing chicken, became an institution, surviving turf wars between rival gangs, changing tastes, and the explosive growth of home gaming systems like Xbox and Playstation that shuttered most other arcades in the city. But as the neighborhood gentrified, this haven for a diverse, unlikely community faced its strongest challenge, inspiring its biggest devotees to next-level greatness.

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In Theatres: AN ART THAT NATURE MAKES: THE WORK OF ROSAMOND PURCELL

ANARTTHATNATURESMAKERS-KEYComing to theatres today, Wednesday, August 10: AN ART THAT NATURE MAKES: THE WORK OF ROSAMOND PURCELL

Molly Bernstein’s portrait of a nature-focused photographer had its world premiere at DOC NYC last year. Other screenings have included Washington DC’s Environmental, Cleveland, and Maine, among other fests.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Finding unexpected beauty in the overlooked, discarded, and decayed, photographer Rosamond Purcell has developed a body of work that has garnered international acclaim, fruitful collaborations with writers such as Stephen Jay Gould, and admirers like Errol Morris. Bernstein details Purcell’s fascination with the natural world – from a mastodon tooth to a hydrocephalic skull – offering insight into her unique way of recontextualizing objects both ordinary and strange into sometimes disturbing but always breathtaking visual studies.

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On VOD: THE MILLION DOLLAR DUCK

MF16-STILL-Million_Dollar_Duck_0Coming to VOD today, Tuesday, August 9: THE MILLION DOLLAR DUCK

Brian Golden Davis’ look at the annual Federal Duck Stamp Competition made its debut at Slamdance earlier this year, where it won both jury and audience awards. Further festival stops included Salem, Telluride Mountainfilm, San Francisco Doc, and Omaha, among other events.

Davis’ likeable film focuses on the unique contest, where artists vie for the chance for their work to be reproduced for the government’s wetland preservation program – the only juried arts competition run by the federal government. While there is no cash prize, past winners have scored lucrative licensing deals, lending the doc its take-notice title. After providing a brief history of the stamp, and how it developed into an art competition, Davis hews close to competition doc conventions, profiling several artists who are taking their shot, noting that in such a specialized contest with a relatively small pool of entrants, an individual’s chances of winning are more within reach. Subjects include newbies and past winners alike, including a former champion who represents one of three brothers who have dominated the competition in past years, a full-time artist hoping to provide for his young family, and even an outsider to the community who rankles its traditionalist members by using unconventional materials like sequins in his entries. Demonstrating their artistic process, Davis follows them from field research to execution, sometimes taking more than a year to fine tune there duck portraits, and onto the convivial two-day competition, as contenders react to their work being scored and sweat it out until the final results.

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On DVD: WOMEN HE’S UNDRESSED

women he's undressedComing to DVD today, Tuesday, August 9: WOMEN HE’S UNDRESSED

Gilliam Armstrong’s tribute to an acclaimed Hollywood costume designer made its bow at Sydney last year. Additional fest play included DOC NYC, Toronto, Mill Valley, Chicago, Hong Kong, Minneapolis-St Paul, and Seattle, among other events.

Armstrong’s elusive subject is Orry George Kelly, a fellow Australian who made a name for himself in Hollywood as Orry-Kelly, designing costumes for countless classic pictures. While his work is well-remembered and lauded – he won Academy Awards for SOME LIKE IT HOT, LES GIRLS, and AN AMERICAN IN PARIS – he himself is largely forgotten. Faced with a dearth of archival material featuring her protagonist, Armstrong opts for an audacious solution: casting an actor to embody Orry-Kelly in deliberately over-the-top, theatrical settings. As this avatar relates the designer’s life story, the director uses clips from his many films, as well as interviews with several notables – from actresses like Angela Lansbury and Jane Fonda, to fellow costume designers such as Ann Roth, and critics like Leonard Maltin. In the process, this affectionate film pulls back the curtain on old Hollywood, with a particular contemplation of what Orry-Kelly’s experiences as a closeted gay man in a very different time might have been like.

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On DVD: KOKO: THE GORILLA WHO TALKS

kokoComing to DVD today, Tuesday, August 9: KOKO: THE GORILLA WHO TALKS

Jonathan Taylor’s profile of a long-running human/simian communication experiment had its premiere on British television earlier this year. It made its stateside debut last week on PBS.

I previously wrote about the doc here,

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On VOD: WEINER

weinerComing to VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, August 9: WEINER

Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg’s behind-the-scenes look at an unfolding political scandal debuted at Sundance earlier this year, picking up a grand jury prize. The film went on to screen at True/False, New Directors/NewFilms, Hot Docs, Full Frame, Sarasota, RiverRun, Nashville, IFF Boston, San Francisco, Montclair, and Sydney, among other events.

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

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On TV: HITCHCOCK/TRUFFAUT

HITCHCOCKTRUFFAUT-KEYComing to HBO tonight, Monday, August 8: HITCHCOCK/TRUFFAUT

Kent Jones’ revisitation of a legendary interview debuted at Cannes last year. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, Telluride, Deauville, Toronto, San Sebastian, London, Mill Valley, Tallgrass, Chicago, AFI Fest, Tallinn Black Nights, and Denver, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here,

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In Theatres: OLYMPIC PRIDE, AMERICAN PREJUDICE

olympic prideComing to theatres today, Friday, August 5: OLYMPIC PRIDE, AMERICAN PREJUDICE

Deborah Riley Draper’s look at the experiences of African American athletes at the 1936 Olympics made its bow at Los Angeles earlier this Summer. The doc also screened at the American Black Film Festival and the recently wrapped Traverse City Film Festival.

In 1936, just three years into the Nazi regime, Germany hosted the Olympic Games, and saw it as an propagandistic opportunity to take to the world stage and prove Aryan superiority. As popular memory would have it, Hitler’s plan was foiled by one pioneering athlete: African-American track-and-field wonder Jesse Owens, emblematic of America’s melting pot. Draper’s film serves as a corrective to this simplistic and partial history, turning her attention to the other seventeen African-American athletes who also traveled to Berlin to compete for Team USA. Importantly, the film is more than an argument to celebrate their long-forgotten achievements, as notable as they were; instead it contextualizes their participation in the Olympics within a still racially segregated America and which turned its collective back on the champions upon their return. While fairly conventional in its approach, the doc incorporates revealing archival footage as well as audio interviews with some of the athletes, as none is still surviving. Draper successfully conveys the controversies at play in the lead-up and throughout the controversial Games, which the US came close to boycotting; the Olympians’ surprising welcome reception in the Olympic Village; and the sad fates that befell many back home, decades before the struggle for Civil Rights firmly took hold.

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