Category Archives: Releases

In Theatres: AFTERWARD

Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, January 10:
AFTERWARD

Director:
Ofra Bloch

World Premiere:
DOC NYC 2018

Select Festivals:
San Francisco Jewish, Santa Barbara, RiverRun, Greenwich, Tel Aviv Human Rights, Big Muddy, Cleveland, Sarasota, Minneapolis-St Paul

About:
The filmmaker confronts her personal demons around Germany, Israel, and Palestine.

I wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Ofra Bloch, a New York-based psychoanalyst specializing in trauma, was born in Jerusalem to a Jewish family that emigrated to Palestine in the 1920s. Disturbed by the resurgence of fascism and anti-Semitism around the world, Ofra travels to Germany, Israel, and Palestine to confront her own deep-seated feelings about Germans and Palestinians, and the tensions between the Holocaust and the Nakba. In the process, she explores the nature of resistance and the possibility of hope.

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On VOD: RED DOG

New to VOD this week:
RED DOG

Directors:
Luke Dick and Casey Pinkston

World Premiere:
SXSW 2019

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Lone Star, deadCENTER, Nashville, San Antonio

About:
A musician explores the history of the infamous Oklahoma City strip club in which he grew up.

The film screened as part of DOC NYC, for which our program notes read:
Once upon a time, in downtown Oklahoma City, a seedy strip club called the Red Dog Saloon was an emblem of the 1970s oil boom. It also served as the childhood home of award-winning musician Luke Dick and his infamous go-go dancing mother Kim. Combining funky animation, archival footage, and interviews with Red Dog regulars, this quirky, high-spirited film reconstructs the culture and times of the strip club, as well as the circumstances that led to Kim and Luke’s unorthodox life there.

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On DVD: ROTHKO: PICTURES MUST BE MIRACULOUS

Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, January 7:
ROTHKO: PICTURES MUST BE MIRACULOUS

Director:
Eric Slade

World Premiere:
American Masters (October 2019)

About:
A biography of the influential abstract expressionist artist.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: MCCARTHY

Coming to PBS’s American Experience tonight, Monday, January 6:
MCCARTHY

Director:
Sharon Grimberg

World Premiere:
American Experience (January 2020)

About:
A comprehensive account of the rise and fall of notorious Wisconsin senator Joseph McCarthy.

Director Sharon Grimberg effectively if conventionally recounts how Joseph McCarthy went from humble farm family beginnings to defeat a seemingly unbeatable incumbent, becoming the junior senator from Wisconsin, and go on to become a feared household name in Washington DC. In February 1950, capitalizing on Cold War tensions, McCarthy fabricated the possession of a list of known communists in the US State Department at an unassuming political event in West Virginia. Once the press fell for the story, the Red Scare was on, and, seeking continued attention, McCarthy needed to keep the lies going, ruining countless lives in the process. McCarthy’s reign of terror continued until the famously televised Army-McCarthy hearings of June 1954, when the Republican establishment finally had enough of the senator’s showboating and publicly censured him. While this did not end the larger anti-communist or anti-homosexual crusade, it did effectively end popular interest in the senator, who continued to serve until his death in 1957. Though Grimberg didn’t intend to create parallels with a present-day unlikely politician prone to outrageous lies and addicted to media attention, the connections are there for those viewers wishing to see them, making this biography resonant with today’s political circus.

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In Theatres: ADVOCATE

Coming to theatres today, Friday, January 3:
ADVOCATE

Directors:
Rachel Leah Jones and Philippe Bellaïche

World Premiere:
Sundance 2019

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Docaviv, IDFA, CPH:DOX, Hot Docs, Sheffield, Thessaloniki Doc, Krakow, Human Rights Watch, Doc Edge, Philadelphia, Other Israel, United Nations Association, Antenna, UK Jewish, San Francisco Jewish

Notable Recognition:
The doc has been shortlisted for the Academy Awards.

About:
An exploration of the Israeli justice system through a passionate Israeli attorney working for Palestinian defendants.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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Special Screenings: 2020 Oscars Spotlight: Documentaries

Coming to NYC’s IFC Center and AMC Empire 25 (as well as 19 other cities nationwide): Oscars® Spotlight: Documentaries

Continuing the initiative begun last year by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, audiences in the following cities will have the opportunity to see all 15 of the official Documentary Feature shortlisted titles in theatres: Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, McLean VA, Miami, Minneapolis, NYC, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Raleigh, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Santa Barbara, Seattle-Tacoma, St Louis, Tampa-St Pete, and Washington DC.

My previous coverage of the shortlist may be found here.

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On TV: LINDA RONSTADT: THE SOUND OF MY VOICE

Coming to CNN tomorrow, Wednesday, January 1:
LINDA RONSTADT: THE SOUND OF MY VOICE

Directors:
Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman

World Premiere:
Tribeca 2019

Select Festivals:
Provincetown, AFI Docs, Atlantic

About:
A look back at the celebrated pop artist’s career.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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2019 Top Ten

As 2019 comes to a close, I’ve compiled below my list of top titles for the year.

I’ve restricted my list exclusively to nonfiction as usual, in contrast to virtually every other best of the year list out there which generally ignores documentary filmmaking. My selections are also limited to official releases in 2019.

Below are pointers to what I’ve written about my top ten feature nonfiction of 2019 on what (not) to doc previously. These are unranked and in alphabetical order, followed by a list of additional notable film and episodic titles.

Top Ten:

AMERICAN FACTORY

APOLLO 11

THE BIGGEST LITTLE FARM

FOR SAMA

HAIL SATAN?

HONEYLAND

LOS REYES

MAIDEN

MIDNIGHT FAMILY

ONE CHILD NATION

+ Ten More:

17 BLOCKS

AMÉRICA

COLLEGE BEHIND BARS

COMMUNION

FOR THE BIRDS

JAY MYSELF

THE RAFT

SEA OF SHADOWS

WALKING ON WATER

WOODSTOCK: THREE DAYS THAT DEFINED A GENERATION

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On TV: MIDNIGHT TRAVELER

Coming to PBS’s POV this coming Monday, December 30:
MIDNIGHT TRAVELER

Director:
Hassan Fazili

World Premiere:
Sundance 2019

Select Festivals:
Berlin, CPH:DOX, Hot Docs, Docaviv, DocumentaMadrid, DOXA, Sheffield, Thessaloniki, True/False, Doc Edge, RiverRun, Seattle, Montclair, Biografilm, San Francisco, Salem, Sydney

About:
The filmmaker, his wife, and their two daughters face an uncertain road to asylum when they are forced to flee Afghanistan.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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On DVD/VOD: JIM ALLISON: BREAKTHROUGH

New to DVD/VOD this week:
JIM ALLISON: BREAKTHROUGH

Director:
Bill Haney

World Premiere:
SXSW 2019

Select Festivals:
Seattle, IFF Boston, Woods Hole, Full Frame, DocLands, , Minneapolis-St Paul, Sedona

About:
A Texan scientist doggedly pursues immunotherapy as a potential way to cure some cancers.

Bill Haney’s film tells the story of Nobel Prize winner Jim Allison and his development of ipilimumab, an immunotherapy drug. Affected early in life by his mother’s death from cancer, he has spent decades working on an effective cure for some kinds of cancer in the controversial field of immunotherapy – essentially treating not the cancer but the body’s immune system as a way for it to fight off the cancer itself. While Allison should make for a compelling subject, not only for his lifelong scientific mission, but for his maverick demeanor, Haney unfortunately takes a very straightforward, old-fashioned biographical approach that feels promotional and educational TV at the same time. Where the film could have shined is in its profile of Sharon Belvin, a woman who benefited from his research, but her story appears in awkwardly intermittent segments that feel like interruptions, robbing them of their impact.

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