Coming to ESPN’s 30 for 30 series this Sunday, June 7:
BE WATER
Director:
Bao Nguyen
World Premiere:
Sundance 2020
About:
A reflection on the brief but impactful career of legendary actor Bruce Lee.
I profiled the doc before Sundance here.
Coming to ESPN’s 30 for 30 series this Sunday, June 7:
BE WATER
Director:
Bao Nguyen
World Premiere:
Sundance 2020
About:
A reflection on the brief but impactful career of legendary actor Bruce Lee.
I profiled the doc before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
Coming to virtual theatrical today, Friday, June 5:
PARKLAND RISING
Director:
Cheryl Horner
World Premiere:
Woodstock 2019
Select Festivals:
deadCENTER, Am Docs
About:
A portrait of survivors and family members in the aftermath of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas school shooting.
The tragic 2018 shooting in Parkland FL has inspired much reflection about gun violence and student activism – as well as several documentaries. Cheryl Horner’s film is not even the latest, with Kim A Snyder’s US KIDS on the same topic having made its high-profile debut at Sundance this January. Like that film, Horner’s project focuses less on the horrific event to instead spotlight its aftermath. Specifically, the film explores the activism that the shooting engendered in students like the charismatic David Hogg, as well as the activities of victim Joaquin Oliver’s father, Manuel, who channels his response through art. Both of these figures are compelling – so much so that they have already been featured extensively in other docs and news media, making the film, while earnest and affecting at times, feel overly familiar and somewhat underdeveloped as a result.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases

Photo: Madmen Films
Director:
Damon Gameau
World Premiere:
Berlin 2019
Select Festivals:
Seattle, Virginia
About:
The filmmaker tries to envision a hopeful future for his young daughter based on the adoption of practical environmental solutions.
Concerned about mankind’s environmental impact on the planet, and what it may mean for his four-year-old daughter’s future, filmmaker Damon Gameau sets out around the world – acknowledging his project’s carbon footprint in the process – to seek out practical, attainable solutions to reverse the negative aspects of climate change. Along the way, he pauses to imagine what life will be like for his grown daughter in 2040 if these solutions are actually implemented, using visual effects and some hokey humor. Gameau’s film is a well-meaning and informative project, and, no doubt, for many viewers, his optimistic take will be a welcome one, compared to the more typical doom and gloom tone most environmentally focused docs tend to take. That said, he unfortunately borrows from the Michael Moore/Morgan Spurlock school of documentary filmmaking, serving as the near-constant on-air guide and narrator, making the film far too much about himself and his journey – an off-putting decision that makes the film feel somewhat amateurish and derivative, despite its best intentions.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
Coming to VOD tomorrow, Friday, June 5:
THE BOOKSELLERS
Director:
DW Young
World Premiere:
New York Film Festival 2019
Select Festivals:
St Louis, Miami Jewish, RiverRun, Sebastopol Doc, Victoria
About:
An affectionate portrait of NYC’s community of rare book dealers and collectors.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Already on MUBI and expanding to other VOD platforms today, Tuesday, June 2:
SEARCHING EVA
Director:
Pia Hellenthal
World Premiere:
Berlin 2019
Select Festivals:
CPH:DOX, IDFA, Hot Docs, Jeonju, Docs Against Gravity, Biografilm, AFI Fest,
About:
A portrait of Eva, a sex worker, model, and writer who explores her sexual autonomy and lives her life online.
Born in Italy and now living in Berlin, Eva Collè is a millennial who appears to have attracted a dedicated following on social media through some combination of a forthright message of self-empowerment and an openness about her body and sexuality. While she inspires many of her followers to be self-assured and reject outside judgement and criticism, others are, of course, critical and even moralizing, as their messages are displayed intermittently throughout the film. As Eva looks for an apartment, takes on low-paying modeling gigs and more lucrative sex work, and hangs out with family, friends, and lovers, filmmaker Pia Hellenthal follows her, giving her strangely reserved protagonist even more attention. While some viewers may concur with Eva’s followers that her life is like an indie movie, others will find it much ado about not much at all, with Eva’s musings growing quickly tiresome.
Note: Since the conclusion of filming, the protagonist, known as Eva and identified as female in the film, has since elected to be called Adam and now goes by male pronouns. Adam does not have an issue with his previous name and female pronouns being used in the context of discussing the film.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
Coming to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, June 2:
REWIND
Director:
Sasha Joseph Neulinger
World Premiere:
Tribeca 2019
Select Festivals:
BFI London, Traverse City, Palm Springs, Denver, Mill Valley, Nashville, Rome, Heartland, Big Sky Doc, Atlanta Jewish
About:
A filmmaker confronts his traumatic past.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
Coming to VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, June 2:
THE INFILTRATORS
Directors:
Alex Rivera and Cristina Ibarra
World Premiere:
Sundance 2019
Select Festivals:
SXSW, Hot Docs, Miami, NY Latino, Montclair, Calgary, Hawaii
About:
A hybrid docufiction project detailing the mission of undocumented youth to be detained by Border Patrol.
I profiled the film before Sundance here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Film Festivals, Recommendations, Releases, Sundance
Coming to virtual theatrical today, Friday, May 29:
URSULA VON RYDINGSVARD: INTO HER OWN
Director:
Daniel Traub
World Premiere:
Vancouver 2019
Select Festivals:
Berkshire, Architecture Design Art, Hamptons Doc
About:
A portrait of the noted sculptor.
Ursula von Rydingsvard is known for her monumental sculptures, composed of highly manipulated cedar, with work featured at MoMA, the Met, the Whitney, the Art Institute of Chicago, and numerous other notable institutions, as well as public art projects that encourage viewers’ tactile engagement. Filmmaker Daniel Traub offers audiences an intimate look at von Rydingsvard’s Brooklyn studio and the collaborative process that goes into her work, while also exploring her background as a Polish native born during WWII, who emigrated to a small working class Connecticut town as a child. Though soft-spoken, the artist speaks volumes as she relates the impact of her violent father and schizophrenic husband on her development as an artist, and how this background primed her to move to NYC in the 1970s to focus on art as a career. While somewhat limited by a too-brief running time, Traub’s film succeeds in paying von Rydingsvard her due, while enticing newcomers to her work to seek out more information.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases
New to VOD this week:
STREET FIGHTING MEN
Director:
Andrew James
World Premiere:
IFF Boston 2017
Select Festivals:
San Francisco DocFest, Big Sky Doc, Freep, St Louis, Brooklyn, Rhode Island
About:
An observational portrait of three African-American men of different generations living in Detroit.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Releases
New to DVD this week:
RUDEBOY: THE STORY OF TROJAN RECORDS
Director:
Nicolas Jack Davies
World Premiere:
London 2018
Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, IDFA, CPH:DOX, Doc’n’Roll, Glastonbury, Thessaloniki Doc
About:
The history of the pioneering label that popularized Jamaican music in the UK and beyond.
I previously wrote about the doc here.
Filed under Documentary, Film, Recommendations, Releases