Category Archives: Releases

On DVD/VOD: DRAG KIDS

New to DVD/VOD this week:
DRAG KIDS

Director:
Megan Wennberg

World Premiere:
Hot Docs 2019

Select Festivals:
Rotterdam, RIDM, St Louis, NewFest, Inside Out

About:
Four preteen drag performers are brought together for Montreal Pride.

Inspired by the more visible – and sanitized – version of drag popularized by RUPAUL’S DRAG RACE, younger fans have taken to dressing up themselves. Some have generated press and gained social media followings, while others are decidedly under the radar. Director Megan Wennberg profiles four such kids – Stephan and Nemis (both age 9) and Jason and Bracken (both 11) – hailing from Canada, the US, and Spain by way of the UK, and concocts an excuse to have them meet. The kids demonstrate minor points of interest – Bracken is a biological female performing femininity in a field dominated by males, Jason is from the Bible Belt – but, frankly, as performers, they’re only about as good as one would expect a preteen to be. Their parents are far more interesting, demonstrating refreshing support despite criticism. Still, the film struggles to sustain feature length, and is predicated on a manufactured premise – arranging for the disparate subjects to unite for a group performance in Montreal – making this a very surface treatment that sidesteps the more interesting questions raised about the appropriation of queer culture and the attempts to strip it of its radicalness, sexuality, and history.

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Special Screenings: CHICHINETTE: THE ACCIDENTAL SPY

Coming to NYC’s JCC Manhattan for several screenings beginning tomorrow, Wednesday, December 25:
CHICHINETTE: THE ACCIDENTAL SPY

Director:
Nicola Hens

World Premiere:
Haifa 2019

Select Festivals:
Hof, UK Jewish, Kasseler Dokfest

About:
A nonagenarian French Jewish woman reveals her unlikely WWII espionage activities.

For nearly six decades, until she finally wrote a memoir, Marthe Cohn kept her wartime exploits to herself. Now, she travels around the US and beyond from her home in Los Angeles to speak about her experiences – most notably, how, in the last days of WWII, she became a spy behind enemy lines to gather key information about Germany’s activities for French Intelligence. It’s the latter that gave Cohn her the nickname that serves as the film’s title, translated as “little pain in the neck.” Cohn is a charming and fun older woman, a welcome figure to spend time with, but Nicola Hens’ film has structural issues, taking a too strictly chronological approach which robs it of any real drama – Cohn’s spy experiences are crammed into the last half hour of the film, with the bulk of the doc instead spending an outsize amount of time on the otherwise generally uneventful life of its subject.

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In Theatres: WHAT SHE SAID: THE ART OF PAULINE KAEL

Coming to theatres this Wednesday, December 25:
WHAT SHE SAID: THE ART OF PAULINE KAEL

Director:
Rob Garver

World Premiere:
Telluride 2018

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Berlin, Edinburgh, Karlovy Vary, Thessaloniki Doc, Miami, Cleveland, Montclair, Seattle, Docs Against Gravity, Transilvania, New Zealand, Vancouver, Mumbai, Rio, Docaviv

About:
A portrait of controversial and influential film critic Pauline Kael.

The film screened as part of DOC NYC, for which our program notes read:
Pauline Kael is among the most famous and divisive film critics of all time. Her praise helped uplift the careers of Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, and others, while her putdowns left lasting wounds. She was a pioneering woman in a male chauvinistic world. This nuanced portrait captures her complexity while revisiting late-twentieth-century cinema through her lens, using ample film clips, never-before-seen archival, wide-ranging interviews, and her writings voiced by Sarah Jessica Parker.

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On DVD/VOD: PREY

New to DVD/VOD this week:
PREY

Director:
Matt Gallagher

World Premiere:
Hot Docs 2019

Select Festivals:
Calgary, Cinéfest Sudbury

About:
A survivor of sexual abuse sues the Catholic Church.

More than 50 years ago, as a young teen, Rod MacLeod was sexually abused by Father Hodson Marshall, a priest who was permitted to serve in various parishes despite numerous complaints about his pedophilic behavior. Upset with the continued lack of accountability – or even a willingness to apologize for its role in enabling such crimes – MacLeod engages legendary “priest hunter” attorney Rob Talach, to take on the Basilian order of the Catholic Church in Ontario in a civil suit. Director Matt Gallagher is able to draw from a deposition with Marshall before the priest’s death, and interviews Father David Katulski, the primary voice for the Church, both providing disturbingly dismissive answers to the serious charges being considered, reflective of the insidious denial and obstruction that the institution has fostered for generations. Beyond this, however, Gallagher is unable to film within the courtroom itself, a limitation that results in some clunkiness, such as the awkward and excessive inclusion of survivor Patrick McMahon and his protests in front of churches. Ultimately, however, the project is a worthwhile one – an earnest and somewhat hopeful look at an attempt to overcome institutional abuse and combat impunity.

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On DVD: ON THE PRESIDENT’S ORDERS

New to DVD this week:
ON THE PRESIDENT’S ORDERS

Directors:
James Jones and Olivier Sarbil

World Premiere:
CPH:DOX 2019

Select Festivals:
Hot Docs, Sheffield, Melbourne, Human Rights Watch, Bergen, Raindance, Zurich, DokuFest,

About:
An inside look at Filipino president Duterte’s corrupt war on drugs.

I previously wrote about the doc hereS.

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On DVD: THE SERENGETI RULES

New to DVD this week:
THE SERENGETI RULES

Director:
Nicholas Brown

Premiere:
Tribeca 2018

Select Festivals:
CPH:DOX, Hamptons, Jackson Hole, Bergen, Maui, Vancouver, Global Peace,

About:
Scientists explore the impact of keystone species on ecosystems.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On VOD: TO KID OR NOT TO KID

New to VOD this week:
TO KID OR NOT TO KID

Director:
Maxine Trump

World Premiere:
DOC NYC 2018

Select Festivals:
Cleveland, BechdelFest, Woods Hole

About:
A personal look at women’s decision not to have kids.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On VOD: WIG

New to digital download via HBO this week:
WIG

Director:
Chris Moukarbel

World Premiere:
Tribeca 2019

Select Festivals:
NewFest OutCinema, Fringe! Queer

About:
On the past and present of the legendary Wigstock festival.

Beginning in 1984 and running for 20 years, Wigstock was an outdoor drag festival originally taking place in Tompkins Square Park in the East Village. Organized by drag queen Lady Bunny and several friends who were part of NYC’s nightlife scene, the event grew in popularity but faced pushback by the Giuliani administration, being forced to move to the Hudson River Piers until 2001. Though Bunny restarted the event in Tompkins Square after a year’s hiatus, its final incarnation was in 2005 – until she revived it once again in 2018. Director Chris Moukarbel chronicles Wigstock’s history against a backdrop of changing perceptions of queer culture and drag’s place in it, while also showcasing performers in the lead-up to last Summer’s event. Like 1995’s WIGSTOCK: THE MOVIE before it, the film draws from a rich if rough archive of early East Village footage shot within the queens’ nightlife milieu, accompanied by the musings of Bunny and other iconic figures like Kevin Aviance, Flotilla DeBarge, and Linda Simpson, some of whom seem to take particular issue with the popularization, appropriation, and commodification of drag through avenues like RUPAUL’S DRAG RACE. As a counterpoint, Moukarbel also focuses on Charlene Incarnate, an outspoken trans-identified draq performer who has gained a following and won the smaller Bushwig festival, and who participates in the 2018 Wigstock revival, among other representatives of the new generation of drag. The 2018 performances fill the final section of the doc, but, as a whole, the subversive history of Wigstock’s first incarnation is its most compelling element.

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On DVD: BARBARA RUBIN & THE EXPLODING NY UNDERGROUND

New to DVD this week:
BARBARA RUBIN & THE EXPLODING NY UNDERGROUND

Director:
Chuck Smith

Premiere:
Hot Docs 2018

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Rotterdam, Thessaloniki Doc, Seattle, Jeonju

About:
A forgotten 1960s film pioneer receives her due.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: FINDING THE WAY HOME

Coming to HBO tonight, Wednesday, December 18:
FINDING THE WAY HOME

Directors:
Jon Alpert and Matthew O’Neill

World Premiere:
NYC (December 2019)

About:
The stories of several formerly institutionalized children who were given a second chance.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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