Category Archives: Releases

On DVD: SACRED

Coming to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, December 25:
SACRED

Director:
Thomas Lennon

Premiere:
Tokyo 2016

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, IDFA, Sebastopol Doc, RiverRun, Cleveland, Ashland, Montclair

About:
A look at spirituality around the world.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On VOD: STRUGGLE: THE LIFE AND LOST ART OF SZUKALSKI

Coming to Netflix today, Friday, December 21:
STRUGGLE: THE LIFE AND LOST ART OF SZUKALSKI

Director:
Irek Dobrowolski

Premiere:
IDFA 2018

About:
A portrait of a long-forgotten Polish artist rediscovered in California, and the complicated legacy he left behind.

In 1971, pop culture art collector and publisher Glenn Bray chanced upon a book featuring the work of Polish sculptor and painter Stanisław Szukalski from the 1930s. Captivated by Szukalski’s bold, surrealist sculptures, Bray sought out more information only to discover the artist was still alive, living nearby in Los Angeles, and more than happy to discuss his work with Bray and other local artists, including George DiCaprio and his young son Leonardo, who serves as a producer here. Interviewed on camera prior to his death in 1987, Szukalski discusses his work and the strange pseudo-scientific mythology he concocted in his later years – theories which lend his art disturbing nationalistic meaning and also inform the disturbing embrace of Szukalski by ultra right-wing groups in Poland in recent years. What begins as a fairly straightforward celebration of an overlooked artist takes an unsettling turn into a not wholly satisfying examination of the thorny ideology and legacy of his work.

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In Theatres: THE LAST RESORT

Coming to theatres today, Friday, December 21:
THE LAST RESORT

Directors:
Dennis Scholl and Kareem Tabsch

Premiere:
Miami Jewish 2018

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Virginia, Key West, Jewish fests in Toronto, Rochester, and Cleveland

About:
A revealing revisitation of Jewish life in 1970s Miami.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Escaping the harsh winters of the Northeast for the perpetual sun of Florida, Miami Beach became a regular vacation destination for New York’s Jewish community after WWII. By the 1970s, many retired there, transforming Miami Beach into a veritable shtetl. Dennis Scholl and Kareem Tabsch’s film revisits this sunburned paradise through the ambitious and captivating work of Andy Sweet and Gary Monroe, two young photographers who captured this aging population for a decade, even as Miami transformed around them.

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On DVD: TAKE LIGHT

TAKE LIGHT

New to DVD this week:
TAKE LIGHT

Director:
Shasha Nakhai

Premiere:
Cleveland 2018

Select Festivals:
Hot Docs, Atlanta, Durban

About:
A ground-level look at Nigeria’s electricity crisis.

Despite its status as the largest producer of electricity in Africa, Nigeria struggles to provide power to more than half of its population, and, even for those with access, it’s severely limited and undependable. While the citizenry grows angry, blaming corruption and using illicit means to grab their share of energy at no cost, the government points to limitations in their infrastructure, making it impossible to keep up with the demand of the nation’s 200 million consumers. Nakhai capably if somewhat too cursorily explores this challenge of development and resources through several profiles of individuals connected to the issue, including an electrician who survived a dangerous electrocution, a bill collector faced with the unpleasant task of having to cut power to disgruntled customers who can’t or won’t pay their bills, and a pair of Youtubers known as Two Angry Men, who humorously complain about the state of affairs.

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On DVD: TRANSFORMER

New to DVD this week:
TRANSFORMER

Director:
Michael Del Monte

Premiere:
Austin 2017

Select Festivals:
Hot Docs, Big Sky Doc, Hot Springs Doc

About:
A portrait of a champion powerlifter as she struggles with body image issues during her transition to female.

For most of her life, Janae Marie Kroczaleski lived as Matt Kroc, achieving fame within the bodybuilding world with a world record in powerlifting before being publicly outed as transgender. Having bulked up to a 250-lb hypermasculine ideal, however, has left Janae conflicted about her ability to meet society’s standards of what a woman should look like, and what space there is for her in the sport to which she has devoted so much of her time and energy. This ambivalence around Janae’s physical transition – together with the refreshingly open and supportive relationship she shares with her teenage sons – helps differentiate Del Monte’s likeable project from the numerous overly familiar stories of transition that have emerged over the past couple of decades.

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On DVD: MATANGI/MAYA/MIA

New to DVD this week:
MATANGI/MAYA/MIA

Director:
Stephen Loveridge

Premiere:
Sundance 2018

Select Festivals:
Berlin, True/False, CPH:DOX, New Directors/New Films, Docs Against Gravity, Biografilm, Sydney, New Zealand, Melbourne, Helsinki, Zurich, Seattle

About:
An insider perspective on the life and career of popular musician MIA.

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

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On VOD: MR. FISH: CARTOONING FROM THE DEEP END

Coming to iTunes today, Tuesday, December 18:
MR. FISH: CARTOONING FROM THE DEEP END

Director:
Pablo Bryant

Premiere:
Austin 2017

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, IDFA, Hot Docs, Slamdance, Big Sky Doc, Salem, Ashland, Florida

About:
A radical political cartoonist faces the possibility that he must compromise his values to sustain his art.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Mr Fish is a talented political cartoonist known for his subversive and often controversial art. But what happens to an outspoken artist when his once-supportive editors, faced with a vanishing industry, are no longer able to provide a forum for his sardonic take on the world? With a family to support, will Mr. Fish be able to stay true to his principles, or will he be forced to sell himself out in order to sell his art?

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On DVD: FAHRENHEIT 11/9

Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, December 18:
FAHRENHEIT 11/9

Director:
Michael Moore

Premiere:
Toronto 2018

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Busan, London, Tokyo, Docslisboa

About:
Provocateur Michael Moore takes the temperature of America’s polarized political landscape.

The film screened as part of DOC NYC, for which our program notes read:
“One of Moore’s best and most incisively funny films” (Rolling Stone) seeks to understand the rise of Donald Trump and the resistance against him. The filmmaker employs his trademark satire to span multiple topics including the Flint water crisis and a stinging critique of corruption among both Republicans and Democrats. He shines a light on insurgent politicians such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Rashida Tlaib along with the youthful activism stirred by Parkland students.

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On TV: MAN ON FIRE

Coming to PBS’s Independent Lens tonight, Monday, December 17:
MAN ON FIRE

Director:
Joel Fendelman

Premiere:
Slamdance 2018

Select Festivals:
Big Sky Doc, Indie Grits, Atlanta, Newport Beach, Sidewalk, Hot Springs Doc, St Louis

About:
The self-immolation of a local pastor forces a small Texan town to reckon with its history of racism.

In 2014, Charles Moore, a minister born and raised in Grand Saline TX set himself on fire, leaving behind a letter calling for the community to repent for its long history of mistreatment of African Americans. The film presents the steps leading to this action in belabored, slo-mo re-enactments, with some context provided through interviews with family members, friends, and community members. Older members of the community seem to be in denial about any allegations of racism or of the clear self-segregation that has resulted in the town being virtually absent of black people, while some younger residents seem more conflicted, and African Americans living outside of Grand Saline share their feelings of not being welcome there. Clocking in at under an hour, Fendelman’s earnest project feels more like a padded short than a fully developed feature, with the re-enactments serving as an unfortunate ponderous crutch that prevents a deeper dive into the core issues.

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On TV: FAIL STATE

Coming to Starz tonight, Monday, December 17:
FAIL STATE

Director:
Alexander Shebanow

Premiere:
Austin 2017

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Big Sky, SXSW EDU, Cleveland, Nashville, Brooklyn

About:
An exposé of predatory for-profit colleges.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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