Category Archives: Releases

In Theatres: BLOWIN’ UP

Coming to theatres today, Friday, April 5:
BLOWIN’ UP

Director:
Stephanie Wang-Breal

Premiere:
Tribeca 2018

Select Festivals:
Hot Docs, AFI Docs, DMZ Docs, Camden, Big Sky Doc, Hot Springs Doc, Antenna Doc, New Orleans, AFI Fest, San Diego Asian, Martha’s Vineyard

About:
A look at a unique NYC courtroom that assists sex workers and trafficked women.

Judge Toko Serita presides over the Queens Human Trafficking Intervention Court, a courtroom that offers counseling rather than punishment, recognizing that, for many women, coercion has played a key role in their involvement in sex work. Taking a largely observational approach, Wang-Breal drops the viewer in the midst of the courtroom activity without any immediate context, making for an initially disorienting experience that in some ways matches the perspective of the largely undocumented Asian defendants that face Serita’s bench. Soon enough, it’s clear that the film will be focusing on the women who make the courtroom work, rather than on individual defendants – though brief testimony and counseling sessions with the latter are heard. The bulk of the doc’s time is spent within the court with Serita and other dedicated figures, including Assistant District Attorney Kim Affronti and, most notably, Eliza Hook, a counselor from partner organization GEMS (Girls Educational and Mentoring Services) as they serve a truly positive and effective role in trafficked women’s lives as the latter try to leave the life (the meaning of the film’s title). If the film makes a slight misstep, it’s in following some of these subjects outside of the court, such as an extended thread involving Serita’s sick father, as a means to round them out further, something that, while admirable, ultimately feels unnecessary and too disconnected from the film’s true focus. Beyond that minor issue, Wang-Breal crafts a compelling and largely inspiring portrait – though the spectre of a newly-elected Trump administration’s crackdown on undocumented immigrants late in the film tempers the mood somewhat.

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On VOD: HELLO HELLO HELLO : LEE RANALDO : ELECTRIC TRIM

New to VOD via Vimeo on Demand this week:
HELLO HELLO HELLO : LEE RANALDO : ELECTRIC TRIM

Director:
Fred Riedel

Premiere:
Montclair 2017

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Doc’n Roll

About:
A behind-the-scenes look at a musician’s collaborative creative process.

The film screened as part of DOC NYC, for which our program notes read:
Legendary Sonic Youth guitarist Lee Ranaldo embarks on the recording of a new experimental concept album with a little help from some friends, including Spanish producer Raül Refree and acclaimed novelist Jonathan Lethem, serving here as lyricist. Recording sessions immerse the audience in his thrillingly creative process, allowing full access to his studio collaborations with guest artists including Nels Cline (Wilco), Sharon Van Etten, Alan Licht, Kid Millions (Oneida), and Steve Shelley (Sonic Youth).

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In Theatres: REINVENTING ROSALEE

Coming to theatres today, Friday, April 5:
REINVENTING ROSALEE

Director:
Lillian Glass

Premiere:
Los Angeles Jewish 2018

About:
A portrait of a 102-year-old Holocaust survivor.

Rosalee Glass survived the Holocaust and a Siberian gulag to eventually have a family, and, in her later years, embrace life to the fullest, challenging herself to become an actress, travel, and participate in new activities, from boxing to senior beauty pageants. She’s an optimistic, ever-smiling figure, happily retelling her story for her daughter Lillian’s camera here. The result, unfortunately, is largely amateurish, from its old-fashioned and excessive narration to poor, home video quality footage, making it something of a headscratcher that this is being released commercially at all.

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On VOD: V-CARD

New to VOD this week:
V-CARD

Director:
Jamaal Green

Premiere:
Cinekink 2018

About:
A 23 year old virgin makes a film about virginity and his quest to lose his.

Dillon is a tall, larger guy who is still a virgin in his early 20s, and, as he or his friends explain more than once, takes on this film project as a way to make sense of his virginity, and, ideally, lose it. He sets off to interview pretty much anyone he can find about virginity: academics dealing with sexuality and gender, sex therapists, his parents, his friends, porn actors and actresses, comedians, and, recurringly, vox pops around NYC. Supplementing this are video diary entries, meta conversations about the film, and adventures in online-, app-, and speed dating. Though on the surface he is outgoing and able to engage the various women he interviews, Dillon has a defeatist attitude born from years of rejection, forcing him to change his attitude to find a solution to his issues. While Dillon seems like a nice guy – his performativity makes it hard to get a real sense of authenticity – he and his collaborators have made a clunky film. Beyond its weak production values and very familiar premise, the project suffers from a common crutch for novice documentarians: the meta film. Dillon spends an excessive amount of time explaining what the film is or discussing the film, making it feel tedious and far longer than it is.

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On VOD: BARISTAS

New to VOD this week:
BARISTAS

Director:
Rock Baijnauth

Premiere:
VOD release (April 2019)

About:
Four national champion baristas prepare for the world championship in South Korea.

A thematic sequel to the filmmaker’s 2015 film, BARISTA, this sometimes overly slick doc trails four competitions who have already been named best barista of their own countries as they vie for world recognition. For the uninitiated, the film reviews competition rules, and then follows its subjects – from Japan, Ireland, Germany, and the US – as they develop their presentations and signature drinks in the lead up to the event, the more interesting aspect of this project. Once the action shifts over to Seoul, the competition itself is presented in a scattered, montage-driven manner, as some protagonists find themselves eliminated, and others make the final. While Baijnauth is able to convey his subjects’ personalities fairly well, and captures an appropriate hipster vibe as a whole, the film is somewhat underwhelming, and likely only of real interest for die-hard coffee aficionados.

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In Theatres Redux: AMAZING GRACE

Coming back to theatres tomorrow, Friday, April 5:
AMAZING GRACE

Realized and Produced by:
Alan Elliott

Premiere:
DOC NYC 2018

Select Festivals:
Berlin, SXSW, True/False, AFI Fest, Full Frame, Pan African

About:
A landmark Aretha Franklin music concert film is released over forty years after it was filmed.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: WALL

Coming to theatres today, Wednesday, April 3:
WALL

Director:
Cam Christiansen

Premiere:
Calgary 2017

Select Festivals:
CPH:DOX, Edinburgh, Annecy

About:
An animated adaptation of David Hare’s play exploring the impact of Israel’s West Bank barrier.

Presented free to audiences in a one-week run at NYC’s Film Forum, Christiansen’s film will, of course, have resonance with American viewers due to the current presidential administration’s obsession with a border wall with Mexico. While that contentious project sits outside of the scope of Hare and Christiansen’s doc, another historical structure, the Berlin Wall, is invoked here, with its similarities and contrasts to the Israel/Palestine separation barrier pointed out during Hare’s meditation on mitigating conflict between the two nations. Reviewing the barrier’s origins in response to terrorist bombings within Israel, Hare notes its relative successes and failures – bombings down, but rocket attacks up – and seeks out the perspectives of individuals on both sides, literally. Christiansen provides audiences with an imaginative way to experience the wall and its various meanings, while also helping to break the project out of its theatrical origins – though there’s no fully escaping its staginess, given Hare’s monologuing.

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On DVD/VOD: AMERICAN RELAPSE

New to DVD and VOD this week:
AMERICAN RELAPSE

Directors:
Pat McGee and Adam Linkenhelt

Premiere:
Rhode Island 2018

Select Festivals:
Cleveland, Orlando, Anchorage, Montana

About:
A candid look at America’s heroin epidemic through the perspective of recovering addicts helping others navigate rehab.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD/VOD: ¡LAS SANDINISTAS!

Coming to DVD and VOD today, Tuesday, April 2:
¡LAS SANDINISTAS!

Director:
Jenny Murray

Premiere:
SXSW 2018

Select Festivals:
Lima, Southern Circuit, Maryland

About:
The female leaders of the 1979 Nicaraguan revolution look back at their unsung accomplishments.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD/VOD: THE GREAT BUSTER: A CELEBRATION

Coming to DVD and VOD today, Tuesday, April 2:
THE GREAT BUSTER

Director:
Peter Bogdanovich

Premiere:
Venice 2018

Select Festivals:
Telluride, Chicago, Deauville, Mill Valley

About:
A tribute to comic screen legend Buster Keaton.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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