Category Archives: Releases

On TV/DVD: TED WILLIAMS: THE GREATEST HITTER WHO EVER LIVED

Coming to PBS’s American Masters today, Monday, July 23 and on DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, July 24:
TED WILLIAMS: THE GREATEST HITTER WHO EVER LIVED

Director:
Nick Davis

Premiere:
Montclair 2018

About:
A profile on the life and career of the legendary major league baseball player.

Ted Williams escaped a childhood of neglect on the baseball field, channeling himself single-mindedly to master his swing and make a name for himself. He did so immediately after joining the Boston Red Sox in 1939, breaking batting records within a couple of seasons, and insisting for the rest of his life that he be referred to at any public event by the epithet that doubles as the film’s subtitle. Davis explores Williams’ troubled background, the son of an alcoholic salesman and photographer father and a Mexican-American Salvation Army volunteer mother who typically left her children at home while she tried to save souls in Tijuana. Playing in an era of discrimination, and ashamed of his Mexican heritage, Williams kept this background a secret, though he later spoke out publicly in support of inducting Negro League players in the Baseball Hall of Fame. While hewing close to the PBS strand’s typical approach of talking head interviews with family members, experts, and admirers, mixed with archival footage, Davis’ film offers a compelling look at the outspoken, larger than life athlete, who maintained a contentious relationship with both the press and fans due to his prickly personality and ego during his two decades on the diamond – providing even viewers uninterested in baseball with a reason to watch.

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On TV: THE WAR TO BE HER

Coming to PBS’s POV today, Monday, July 23:
THE WAR TO BE HER

Director:
Erin Heidenreich

Premiere:
Toronto 2016 (under original title GIRL UNBOUND: THE WAR TO BE HER)

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Cleveland, Frameline, Outfest, Telluride Mountainfilm, MIX Brasil, Heartland, Milwaukee

About:
A young Pakistani woman defies a Taliban ban on sports.

The film screened as part of DOC NYC, for which our program notes read:
Maria Toorpakai Wazir has spent her young life defying expectations. At age 25, she is an internationally competitive squash player. But in her home country of Pakistan, she remains controversial. In her family’s region of Waziristan, women are forbidden by the Taliban from playing sports. Erin Heidenreich follows Maria over several months as she represents Pakistan on the national team and carves out her own identity, despite threats to her family.

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In Theatres: MCQUEEN

Photo by Ann Ray

Coming to theatres today, Friday, July 20:
MCQUEEN

Director:
Ian Bonhôte

Co-Director:
Peter Ettedgui

Premiere:
Tribeca 2018

Select Festivals:
Hot Docs, Seattle, Victoria, Nashville, Dallas, Biografilm, Sydney, Melbourne, Revelation Perth, Frameline, Provincetown

About:
A portrait of late fashion designer Alexander McQueen.

Rising from working class beginnings in London, Lee McQueen made his mark in art school and Savile Row, finding a patron and muse in influential scenester Isabella Blow, who encouraged him to use his more posh sounding middle name “Alexander” when launching his own line. His fierce originality and showmanship garnered international acclaim from the 1990s through his suicide in 2010. Bonhôte and Ettedgui’s exploration of the maverick’s life and career makes great use of footage from his vibrant, confrontational shows, combined with candid interviews with friends and colleagues. The doc’s production design is worthy of their over the top subject, but, even given that, the skull motif animation treatments that serve as section dividers cross the line into distracting fussiness and overstylization. At times, the filmmakers presume too much foreknowledge from viewers about relatively specialized or arcane fashion world details – for example, Blow’s identity and importance to London’s fashion scene is essentially assumed to be self-evident – making this feel a bit too insider. Still, Bonhôte and Ettedgui ably capture McQueen’s prodigious, if troubled, talent and vision.

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On VOD: BALLET NOW

Coming to VOD via Hulu today, Friday, July 20:
BALLET NOW

Director:
Steven Cantor

Premiere:
Seattle 2018

Select Festivals:
Nantucket

About:
A behind-the-scenes look at the creation of an innovative dance showcase.

Last summer, two dozen dancers from around the world, reflecting diverse styles – ballet, hip hop, and tap – joined together for BalletNOW, a series of performances at the Los Angeles Music Center to demonstrate the range of modern ballet. Its visionary curator: Tiler Peck, principal performer of the New York City Ballet. Director Steven Cantor follows Peck as the first woman to take on this daunting but fulfilling role, recruiting dancers and working with choreographers to create a cohesive program – one that she not only organizes but in which she also performs.

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In Theatres: FAR FROM THE TREE

Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, July 20:
FAR FROM THE TREE

Director:
Rachel Dretzin

Premiere:
DOC NYC 2017

Select Festivals:
Montclair, RiverRun, GlobeDocs, Documentary Edge, IFF Boston, Hawaii

About:
A film essay and career retrospective examining society’s preoccupation with materialism.

The film premiered at DOC NYC, for which our program notes read:
Andrew Solomon’s bestselling book FAR FROM THE TREE examines how parents face their children’s extreme differences, influenced by the author’s own experiences growing up gay and later becoming a parent. Now filmmaker Rachel Dretzin adapts the book into a beautifully crafted documentary, produced by Participant Media, known for groundbreaking films such as WAITING FOR “SUPERMAN” and FOOD, INC. The film profiles families who offer intimate access to how they experience surprise, resilience, sorrow, courage, hope, and joy. They have a lot to teach us about the depths of love as they confront conditions such as Down syndrome, autism, and dwarfism. The film serves to challenge ideas of “normality” and dispel fear over what’s perceived as “abnormal.”

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In Theatres: GENERATION WEALTH

photo by Lauren Greenfield

Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, July 20:
GENERATION WEALTH

Director:
Lauren Greenfield

Premiere:
Sundance 2018

Select Festivals:
Nantucket, Berlin, SXSW, CPH:DOX, Docville, Full Frame, San Francisco, Sarasota, IFF Boston, Transilvania, Ambulante, Jeonju, Dallas, Docs Against Gravity, Greenwich, Provincetown

About:
A film essay and career retrospective examining society’s preoccupation with materialism.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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On TV: LIGHT IN THE WATER

Coming to Logo TV tomorrow, Thursday, July 19:
LIGHT IN THE WATER

Director:
Lis Bartlett

Premiere:
Logo TV (July 2018)

About:
The story of a pioneering LGBT swim team.

Formed in 1982 by competitive swimmers training for the first Gay Games, the West Hollywod Swim Club put the lie to the stereotype that one couldn’t be both gay and an athlete. Demonstrating their prowess in the water, and soon changing their name to West Hollywood Aquatics to include water polo, they registered as a Masters club, competing among elite athletes as the first openly gay team and finding continued success. Reviewing their 35 year history, Lis Bartlett’s film simultaneously reflects transformative changes in the LGBT community over that same time span, from the emergence of AIDS and the hysteria, fear, and devastating loss that accompanied it, to the rise and ultimate success of marriage equality. In this way, the likeable project transcends the specificity of its Southern California location and focus on water sports to speak to a more universal story of breaking barriers and overcoming adversity.

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On DVD: 44 PAGES

Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, July 17:
44 PAGES

Director:
Tony Shaff

Premiere:
SXSW Edu 2017

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Dallas, Sarasota, Cleveland, RiverRun, Nashville, Sidewalk, Indie Memphis, St Louis,

About:
A behind the scenes look at the most popular children’s magazine in the world.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: ROBIN WILLIAMS: COME INSIDE MY MIND

photo by Mark Sennet

Coming to HBO tonight, Monday, July 16:
ROBIN WILLIAMS: COME INSIDE MY MIND

Director:
Marina Zenovich

Premiere:
Sundance 2018

Select Festivals:
Nantucket, Karlovy Vary, San Francisco, Provincetown, Martha’s Vineyard

About:
A revealing look at the life and career of the late comedian/actor.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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In Theatres: PATH OF BLOOD

Coming to theatres today, Friday, July 13:
PATH OF BLOOD

Director:
Jonathan Hacker

Premiere:
UK theatres (July 2018)

About:
An inside look at al Qaeda terrorists and their campaign against Saudi Arabia in the early 2000s.

A companion to the director’s book of the same name and produced by ZERO DARK THIRTY’s Mark Boal, Hacker’s film is composed entirely of jihadist recordings and Saudi security services footage, chronicling several years of terrorist cell activity directed against perceived enemies of Islam within Saudi Arabia. Opening with seemingly familiar, home movie footage of a jihadist announcing his latest plot, it’s revealed instead to be several outtakes that demonstrate the youth, immaturity, and lack of education of the terrorists, even as they record a message before a suicide bomb attack. From there, this unusual project, disturbing both for showing the brutality of al Qaeda’s actions and for somehow humanizing the people behind their horrific attacks, catalogues a range of jihadist activities within Saudi Arabia, and the Saudis’ response to curb the threat. It’s a chillingly effective way to convey the terrorists’ perspective, not to sympathize with them, but to gain insight into the misguided motivations that have led them to turn to violence not only against the expected non-Muslim targets, but against those Saudi Muslims they view as aiding the US. At the same time, the film sits on uneasy ground, strangely avoiding explicit reference to 9/11 and championing Saudi forces without acknowledging or contextualizing that nation’s role in propagating extremist ideologies that have fed into jihad across the Middle East.

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