Category Archives: Releases

On VOD: RODENTS OF UNUSUAL SIZE

New to VOD this week:
RODENTS OF UNUSUAL SIZE

Directors:
Quinn Costello, Chris Metzler, Jeff Springer

Premiere:
DOC NYC 2017

Select Festivals:
Full Frame, Big Sky Doc, Wild and Scenic, Oxford, Washington DC Environmental, Salem, Indie Grits, Freep, Sarasota, IFF Boston, RiverRun, Doc Edge, SF DocFest, Woods Hole, Sidewalk, DocUtah, Yale Environmental, Tallgrass, Hot Springs Doc

About:
A wide-ranging look at efforts to protect Louisiana from a giant swamp rat.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD/VOD: LONG TIME COMING: A 1955 BASEBALL STORY

New to DVD/VOD this week:
LONG TIME COMING: A 1955 BASEBALL STORY

Director:
Jon Strong

Premiere:
Florida 2018

Select Festivals:
Mill Valley, Austin, Oxford, Capital City Black, Global Peace

About:
The story of the controversial first interracial Little League game to take place in the South.

In 1955, the Pensacola Jaycees, an all-black squad, and the Orlando Kiwanis, an all-white team, faced each other in the Little League State Championship in Florida. This was a controversial face-off, as up to this point, black and white teams would not compete against one another, some states even going so far as to have white teams forfeit games or start their own all-white leagues. While other Florida teams similarly forfeited, the Kiwanis finally agreed to the match, though one of their coaches quit in protest. Ultimately, the Orlando team won, but both teams helped make a small step forward for civil rights, though this is little remembered today. Strong’s film is framed by the captains of both teams, plus several surviving members, reminiscing about the experience, then both teams meeting up together after 60 years to finally speak to one another and address their memories and experiences of segregation and privilege, respectively. While a likeable idea for a doc, the historic game at its core was not filmed, putting Strong’s project at a disadvantage from which it’s not able to recover, resulting in a overly talky, repetitive, and visually lackluster film only really suited for baseball history fanatics.

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On VOD: JAHA’S PROMISE

New to VOD this week:
JAHA’S PROMISE

Directors:
Kate O’Callaghan and Patrick Farrelly

Premiere:
CPH:DOX 2017

Select Festivals:
Sheffield, Mill Valley, Human Rights Watch, Movies That Matter, Bergen

About:
A Gambian woman becomes an activist against female genital mutilation.

As a newborn in Gambia, Jaha Dukureh was subjected to FGM. She didn’t understand its impact on her body for several years, until she was forced by her father to move to NYC to marry a violent man three decades her senior. It was only after she escaped this abusive relationship, remarried in Atlanta, and had a daughter herself that Jaha began to reckon with FGM and become an activist, eventually returning to her homeland to organize a campaign to ban its practice. While O’Callaghan and Farrelly have found a strong, determined protagonist to confront a challenging issue, their storytelling approach is overly basic, with a surfeit of narration from Jaha that makes the project’s message feel spoonfed, weakening its overall impact.

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On DVD/VOD: THE SUNDAY SESSIONS

New to DVD/VOD this week:
THE SUNDAY SESSIONS

Director:
Richard Yeagley

Premiere:
Various cities on National Coming Out Day (October 11, 2017)

About:
An intimate look at gay conversion therapy.

Filmed over two years, Yeagley’s project follows Nathan, a 20something Christian, who undergoes voluntary counseling sessions to overcome his homosexuality. Though long decried as harmful and ineffective, this gay conversion therapy is still promoted by close-minded religious leaders, often overseen by counselors who claim to have successfully renounced their gay desires. Here, that role is taken by Chris, who leads Nathan through discussions that manipulate the young man to delude himself again and again, never offering an option of true self-acceptance. Yeagley gains impressive access to these candid sessions, and refrains from editorializing, allowing the audience to draw its own conclusions. Despite this, and the strange and uncomfortable sense of voyeurism the project affords, the film as a whole is excessively slow, frustrating, and often uninvolving, with some technical deficiencies that prevent it from being wholly successful.

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On DVD: HOT TO TROT

New to DVD this week:
HOT TO TROT

Director:
Gail Freedman

Premiere:
Frameline 2017

Select Festivals:
NewFest, Documentary Edge, LGBT fests in Boston, Atlanta, and London

About:
A profile of same-sex competitive ballroom dancers.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD: AFTER AUSCHWITZ

New to DVD this week:
AFTER AUSCHWITZ

Director:
Jon Kean

Premiere:
Chapman University (September 2016)

Select Festivals:
Nantucket, Los Angeles Jewish, Warsaw Jewish

About:
Six Holocaust survivors share stories of life after the death camp.

I previously wrote about the film AFTER AUSCHWITZ.

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On DVD: JOHN MCENROE: IN THE REALM OF PERFECTION

New to DVD this week:
JOHN MCENROE: IN THE REALM OF PERFECTION

Director:
Julien Faraut

Premiere:
Berlin 2018

Select Festivals:
Cinema du Reel, Art of the Real, Seattle, deadCenter, Las Vegas, Sydney, Melbourne, New Zealand, Provincetown, Jerusalem, Jeonju

About:
The athlete’s 1984 French Open performance illustrates an essay on the linkage between tennis and cinema.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD/VOD: FATHER’S KINGDOM

FATHER’S KINGDOM

Coming to DVD/VOD today, Tuesday, February 5:
FATHER’S KINGDOM

Director:
Lenny Feinberg

Premiere:
DOC NYC 2017

Select Festivals:
RiverRun, Cleveland, Big Sky Doc, Sarasota, Maryland, Sidewalk, March on Washington, Dances With Films, Salem, St Louis, San Francisco Black

About:
The untold story of a once-popular but long-forgotten religious and civil rights leader.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
In the early 1900s, an African-American man named Reverend MJ Divine began a religious movement that would reach over a million followers at its peak, crossing racial divisions and advocating for gender and economic equality. Despite his influence and achievements, Father Divine is little remembered today, dismissed by detractors as a con man and a fraud. The reason: Father Divine claimed to be God. Lenny Feinberg reveals his fascinating story, and that of his last few remaining followers, who are on a mission to keep Father Divine’s legacy alive.

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On DVD/VOD: THE HEAT: A KITCHEN (R)EVOLUTION

Coming to DVD/VOD today, Tuesday, February 5:
THE HEAT: A KITCHEN (R)EVOLUTION

Director:
Maya Gallus

Premiere:
Hot Docs 2018

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Traverse City, San Sebastian, Hot Springs Doc, Edmonton

About:
A portrait of female chefs who have faced the boy’s club of the restaurant industry.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On VOD: HALE COUNTY THIS MORNING, THIS EVENING

Coming to VOD today, Tuesday, February 5:
HALE COUNTY THIS MORNING, THIS EVENING

Director:
RaMell Ross

Premiere:
Sundance 2018

Select Festivals:
CPH:DOX, True/False, New Directors/New Films, Full Frame, Sheffield, Ambulante, Champs-Élysées, Maryland, DOK.fest Munich, Martha’s Vineyard African American, San Francisco, Montclair

Notable Recognition:
The documentary has been nominated for the Academy Awards.

About:
An impressionistic portrait of two young African American men in the American South.

My pre-Sundance profile of the doc may be found here.

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