Category Archives: Releases

On DVD: LOOPERS: THE CADDIE’S LONG WALK

New to DVD this week:
LOOPERS: THE CADDIE’S LONG WALK

Director:
Jason Baffa

World Premiere:
Santa Barbara 2019

Select Festivals:
Cleveland, Boulder, Newport Beach

About:
A celebration of the unsung heroes of golf.

In this inside-baseball approach to the world of golf, director Jason Baffa reviews the role of the caddy historically as it has changed to move beyond simply carrying a golfer’s clubs to serving as a partner, confidante, and game advisor. Several caddies are profiled, including individuals who went on to successful careers as golfers themselves or in other disciplines, such as narrator Bill Murray, a former caddy whose credits, of course, include the iconic comedy CADDYSHACK. Brief consideration is given around issue of race, gender, and class in the profession, and the talking heads, anecdote-oriented proceedings are livened up with some playful animation and archival footage. While suitable for sports programming in addition to its natural audience of golf fans, the doc is ultimately too niche to appeal to a broader viewership.

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On DVD/VOD: BEHIND THE BULLET

Coming to DVD and VOD today, Tuesday, September 3:
BEHIND THE BULLET

Director:
Heidi Yewman

World Premiere:
Slamdance 2019

Select Festivals:
GlobeDocs, Thin Line, Cinequest

About:
An exploration of the impact of gun violence from the perspective of those who used the weapon.

In Heidi Yewman’s thoughtful but somewhat unsatisfying project, she profiles four stories involving gun deaths or injuries. Though it’s not immediately clear until close to the end of the film, all four cases focus on individuals who pulled the trigger, in very different circumstances: gang violence, self-defense during a home invasion, accidental shooting due to unsecured home firearms, and unsuccessful suicide attempt. The latter is a late revelation; for most of the film’s running time, this thread is focused on the long process of Christen’s recovery from disfiguring facial wounds, with the circumstances behind them unstated. Not every thread feels as developed or interrogated as it might have been, and one, dealing with a child’s accidental killing of his younger brother, is particularly frustrating in its displacement of accountability to “God’s will.” While arguably providing an opportunity to reach audiences on both sides of the gun control debate by not actively proselytizing, the film’s near-avoidance of the issue lends an incomplete feel to the project as a whole.

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On DVD: TIANANMEN: THE PEOPLE VS THE PARTY

Photo © Agence Vu/Gabriel | Courtesy PBS

Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, September 3:
TIANANMEN: THE PEOPLE VS THE PARTY

Director:
Ian MacMillan

World Premiere:
PBS (June 2019)

About:
An in-depth look back at the Chinese student protest movement that captivated the world three decades ago.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: COUNCILWOMAN

Coming to PBS’s America ReFramed tomorrow, Tuesday, September 3:
COUNCILWOMAN

Director:
Margo Guernsey

World Premiere:
Big Sky Doc 2019

Select Festivals:
Workers Unite, Laborfest, Salem, Havana NY, CineLasAmericas, NY Dominican, Latino fests in Los Angeles, San Diego, Philadephia

About:
A portrait of a working-class Dominican politician in Providence.

Carmen Castillo is a full-time housekeeper in a Providence RI hotel. When she puts away her uniform, the Dominican immigrant switches gears to her other job: city councilwoman. With neither job alone paying sufficiently to make ends meet for her family, the resilient Castillo leads the charge for fair wages for working families. Dismissed as “just” a maid by some, she demonstrates the dignity of honest work and the power of grassroots organizing, particularly as her seat is challenged. While director Margo Guernsey struggles to adequately include Castillo’s personal life, the determined woman’s appealing personality still shines through. Though focused on local politics, and candid about its challenges, this smaller profile nevertheless speaks to the importance of political engagement.

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On TV: FARMSTEADERS

Coming to PBS’s POV tonight Monday, September 2:
FARMSTEADERS

Director:
Shaena Mallett

World Premiere:
Athens International Film and Video Festival 2018

Select Festivals:
Cucalorus, Big Sky Doc, IFF Boston, Indie Grits, Hot Springs Doc, Newburyport Doc, Chagrin Doc, Southern Circuit

About:
An Ohio couple attempts to restart a family dairy farm.

Providing an intimate look at the struggles of small scale farmers in America, Shaena Mallett’s understated but thoughtful portrait follows Nick and Celeste Nolan, who are working the land that previously belonged to Nick’s late grandfather. Unwilling to see his family’s farm become swallowed up by large industrial farming, Nick tries to reinvent it, with Celeste leading the charge on the cheese production that keeps them afloat. When tragedy strikes their biggest customer, the couple fears for the farm’s sustainability, and worries if they will have anything left to pass on to their young children.

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On VOD: UNTOUCHABLE (2019)

Courtesy of Sundance Institute | Barbara Alper/Getty Images

Coming to Hulu this coming Monday, September 2:
UNTOUCHABLE

Director:
Ursula Macfarlane

World Premiere:
Sundance 2019

Select Festivals:
51 Fest, Melbourne, Sydney. Traverse City, Sheffield, Seoul Women’s

About:
A candid, insider’s look at Harvey Weinstein’s alleged history of abuse.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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On TV: BIG FAMILY: THE STORY OF BLUEGRASS MUSIC

Coming to PBS this Friday, August 30:
BIG FAMILY: THE STORY OF BLUEGRASS MUSIC

Directors:
Matt Grimm and Nick Helton

World Premiere:
Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame & Museum (July 2019)

About:
An exhaustive look at the history and legacy of bluegrass music.

Often dismissed and viewed through a stereotypical lens, bluegrass has a surprisingly wider and more inclusive reach than might be expected. Filmmakers Matt Grimm and Nick Helton offer a wide-ranging survey of this quintessentially American genre, which developed in the 1940s through a fusion of traditional English, Scottish, and Irish music with African-American blues and jazz, and is named after its acknowledged pioneer, Bill Monroe, and his Blue Grass Boys band. The filmmakers adopt PBS’s typical talking heads- and narration-heavy approach, leading from Monroe’s story to the growing popularity of bluegrass not only regionally, but across the US and overseas, with particularly large fanbases in Japan and the Czech Republic. Weighing in are legends in the genre, historians, music fans, and the next generation of performers, supplemented with ample performance footage. Its informational and conventional approach isn’t likely to net a large number of converts, but for already existing bluegrass fans, the doc will serve its celebratory purpose.

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On DVD/VOD: TASTELESS

Coming to DVD and VOD today, Tuesday, August 27:
TASTELESS

Directors:
Jeff Cerulli and Matt Ritter

World Premiere:
White Light City Film Festival 2018

Select Festivals:
Indy, Big Muddy, Tampa Bay Underground

About:
A look at the evolution of comedy through the lens of a controversial joke book series.

In the 1980s, TRULY TASTELESS JOKES, a series of controversial paperbacks became unexpected bestsellers. Full of puerile, crude humor, these humor books lived up to their name, presenting off-color comedy with no limits, with jokes targeting pretty much everyone – women, men, babies, the disabled, gays, and different religious and ethnic groups. Credited at publication to “Blanche Knott,” the books were authored by a young woman named Ashton Applewhite, who, at the time was struggling to make ends meet in an entry-level book publishing position. Here, Applewhite, now a feminist activist, looks back on the origins and surprise popularity of the series, while several comedians reminisce on their impact and discuss how the boundaries of “acceptable” humor have changed since the TASTELESS books’ emergence. While occasionally funny, the film covers fairly well-worn territory in its consideration of outrage culture, and is limited by a mid-length running time and talking heads-heavy visual approach, only occasionally spruced up with some animation.

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On TV: HALSTON

photo by Berry Berenson Perkins

Coming to CNN this Sunday, August 25:
HALSTON

Director:
Frédéric Tcheng

Premiere:
Sundance 2019

Select Festivals:
CPH:DOX, Tribeca, Seattle, Montclair, Sarasota

About:
An exploration of the life and legacy of America’s first celebrity designer.

My pre-Sundance doc profile may be found here.

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In Theatres: MILES DAVIS: BIRTH OF THE COOL

photo by Guy Le Querrec

Coming to theatres today, Friday, August 23:
MILES DAVIS: BIRTH OF THE COOL

Director:
Stanley Nelson

World Premiere:
Sundance 2019

Select Festivals:
Sydney, Miami, Cleveland, Atlanta, RiverRun, Montclair, Krakow, Seattle, Munich, Indielisboa, Tallgrass, Milwaukee,

About:
An expansive portrait of the life and work of the jazz pioneer.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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