Category Archives: Recommendations

In Theatres: TINY TIM: KING FOR A DAY

Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, April 23:
TINY TIM: KING FOR A DAY

Director:
Johan Von Sydow

World Premiere:
Fantasia 2020

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Florida, USA Film Festival, Calgary Underground

About:
A portrait of the eccentric performer.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
For a brief but wondrous time in the late 1960s, Tiny Tim was, improbably, a household name. Generating attention for his distinctive falsetto vocal stylings and unusual appearance, the performer began appearing on various television programs, culminating in his wedding on The Tonight Show, which was watched by more than 40 million people. For Tiny Tim, born Herbert Khaury, it was the fulfillment of a lifetime’s dream to find love and acceptance, but his fame would prove heartbreakingly fleeting.  

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In Virtual Release: PARIS CALLIGRAMMES

Coming to virtual cinemas tomorrow, Friday, April 23:
PARIS CALLIGRAMMES

Director:
Ulrike Ottinger

World Premiere:
Berlin 2020

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, IDFA, Marseille, Melbourne, Vancouver, Brisbane

About:
German auteur Ulrike Ottinger constructs a memoir tracing the influence of the time she spent living in Paris in the 1960s.

The film screened as part of DOC NYC, for which our program notes read:
An epic self-portrait of Ulrike Ottinger, one of Germany’s most prominent contemporary avant-garde artists, known for her paintings, photographs, and, above all, her films. An impressive and extensive archive of sensorial memories, historical photographs, and documentary footage traces the early influences of Ottinger’s life in Paris in the 1960s. This was a time marked by her integration into the rich intellectual and cultural circles of the city, but also engagement in the political and social eruptions around the Algerian War and May 1968. These varied dimensions of her experience make this film an essential historical time capsule, beautifully interwoven with the most precious of memories and images.

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In Theatres: THE GREAT GREEN WALL

Coming to theatres tomorrow, Thursday, April 22:
THE GREAT GREEN WALL

Director:
Jared P Scott

World Premiere:
Venice 2019

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Reykjavik, Chicago, EarthxFilm, RiverRun, Raindance

About:
A life-giving project aims to plant trees across Africa.

The film screened as part of DOC NYC, for which our program notes read:
The effects of climate change on Africa’s Sahel region are devastating: desertification, famine, conflict, and migration. Yet hope lies in the Great Green Wall, an ambitious reforestation project spanning the continent aimed at revitalizing ecosystems and restoring economies. In this story of resilience and self-determination executive produced by Fernando Meirelles, Malian musician/activist Inna Modja journeys from Senegal to Djibouti gathering stories and sharing songs with those on the front line of the fight to save their land and their ways of life.

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On DVD: CLASSIC

New to DVD this week:
CLASSIC

Director:
Tim Kaminski

World Premiere:
Denver 2019

Select Festivals:
Anchorage, Virtual Crossroads, Chagrin Doc

About:
A portrait of a small town through its unique annual tradition: waiting for the ice to melt.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: SISTERS RISING

Coming to The WORLD Channel’s America ReFramed tonight, Tuesday, April 20:
SISTERS RISING

Director:
Willow O’Feral, Brad Heck

World Premiere:
Big Sky 2020

Select Festivals:
NY Americas, Vision Maker, Middlebury New Filmmakers, Boston Women’s, American Indian, Pocahontas Reframed, LA Skins, Out of Africa

About:
Profiles of Native American women who are fighting back against abuse, rape, and trafficking of their community.

North Dakota’s Fort Berthold Reservation has seen a rise in crime rates and sexual assault cases because of its proximity to the Bakken oil field. Due to the degradation of tribal treaties and sovereignty laws, tribal authorities are not able to prosecute non-tribal members for offenses committed in Fort Berthold. Predators know this and view Native women as easy targets – Native women experience much higher rates of rape and sexual assault than non-Native women, with 86% of perpetrators being non-Native men. Willow O’Feral and Brad Heck profile six women attempting to deal with this injustice: Sarah is a lawyer, Dawn is a reservation police officer, Loreline works with rape victims, Chalsey advocates for human trafficking victims, Patty runs a self-empowerment self-defense and wellness center, and Lisa, like several, if not all, of the other women, is a survivor herself, who recounts the challenge of getting her mother to report the domestic abuse she regularly suffered at the hands of her husband. This is a worthwhile project, but one which would have benefited by being expanded to feature rather than broadcast length – in this form, none of the women’s stories is developed thoroughly enough, unfortunately.

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CPH:DOX 2021 Overview

Festival:
The 18th CPH:DOX

Dates:
April 21-May 2

About:
This popular Copenhagen nonfiction event presents more than 130 new and recent features and series online this year.

Continue reading

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On DVD: COOKED: SURVIVAL BY ZIP CODE

Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, April 20:
COOKED: SURVIVAL BY ZIP CODE

Director:
Judith Helfand

World Premiere:
DOC NYC 2018

Select Festivals:
Traverse City, San Francisco Jewish, Woods Hole, EarthxFilm, Sarasota, environmental fests in Washington DC, Yale, and Princeton

About:
An investigation of the victims and profiteers in extreme weather catastrophes.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: PHILLY DA

Coming to PBS’s Independent Lens beginning tomorrow, Tuesday, April 20:
PHILLY DA

Director:
Ted Passon, Yoni Brook, Nicole Salazar

World Premiere:
Sundance 2021

Select Festivals:
Berlin, RiverRun, Philadelphia Jewish

About:
An outspoken district attorney attempts to reform a broken criminal justice system in this docuseries.

I profiled the series before Sundance here.

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On TV: AMERICAN OZ

Coming to PBS’s American Experience tonight, Monday, April 19:
AMERICAN OZ

Director:
Randall MacLowry, Tracy Heather Strain

World Premiere:
American Experience (April 2021)

About:
A portrait of L Frank Baum, best known for his popular series of children’s books that began with THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ.

THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ was first published in 1900, becoming an instant success, and spawned more than a dozen sequels, a traveling multimedia show, a popular stage musical, several less successful silent films all in the lifetime of its creator, L Frank Baum. Of course, the most enduring version of the Oz story came in 1939, two decades after his death, with THE WIZARD OF OZ, and since then, the story has inspired further adaptations and reworkings, from THE WIZ to WICKED. Randall MacLowry and Tracy Heather Strain take a comprehensive look at Baum’s life and experiences and how they influenced the creation of his legendary children’s story. As with all entries in the venerable PBS series, their profile is informational and educational rather than particularly cinematic, presented through extensive narration and talking heads, but is successful nevertheless. The doc traces Baum’s story from a privileged upbringing through a series of entrepreneurial ventures to make his own fortune and support his family, from poultry breeder and actor to traveling salesman, general store manager, and newspaper publisher, before he was encouraged by his mother-in-law, a suffragist and author, to publish his own stories. In some ways, Baum reflected the small-minded sentiments of his times, particularly in his racist – and even disturbingly genocidal – views of indigenous people, but in other ways, surprisingly progressive, such as his support of women’s equality. MacLowry and Strain contextualize these contrasting elements, and demonstrate how they played out in his writing, from stereotypical, racialized characters on the one hand to the more positive focus on a young, empowered heroine. Further, the profile explores how OZ resonated as a distinctly American fairy tale of perseverance and achieving the American Dream, both upon its initial publication at the turn of the century and then again, notably, at the end of the Great Depression with the Judy Garland-starring MGM musical.

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On VOD: CLASSIC

Coming to VOD today, Friday, April 16:
CLASSIC

Director:
Tim Kaminski

World Premiere:
Denver 2019

Select Festivals:
Anchorage, Virtual Crossroads, Chagrin Doc

About:
A portrait of a small town through its unique annual tradition: waiting for the ice to melt.

Nenana AK may be a small town with only approximately 400 residents, but its annual Ice Classic lottery has long attracted attention from across the US. Tim Kaminski’s affectionate portrait chronicles the 100th anniversary of the event, held in 2016, which includes a cash prize of over $300,000 to those entrants who correctly predict the exact date and time that the ice on the Tanana River will finally give way. Of course, the film isn’t really focused on watching ice melt, but instead uses this quirky, singular event as a way to capture small town life and profile some members of the community, including former winners and organizers of the Ice Classic, one of the only sources of work in the town. While one suspects that a short version of the film might be just as or perhaps more successful than a feature treatment, the doc remains a warm, pleasant look at a community.

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