Category Archives: Releases

In Theatres: MILFORD GRAVES FULL MANTIS

Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, July 13:
MILFORD GRAVES FULL MANTIS

Director:
Jake Meginsky

Co-Director:
Neil Young

Premiere:
Rotterdam 2018

Select Festivals:
SXSW, CPH:DOX, Sheffield, Art of the Real, Sarasota, Indielisboa, Maryland

About:
An eclectic portrait of the avant-garde jazz percussionist.

Faced with the eccentricities of their singular subject, director Meginsky and co-director Young take a decidedly non-conventional approach to this profile. Those unfamiliar with Graves’ biography or musical accomplishments will only glean very basic background information here through archival footage of past performances. Instead, the uninitiated is more likely to learn about the titular subject’s unusual world view, interest in martial arts and gardens, theories about physiology and their relationship to tonal scales, and the like. Less a biography and more a master class in whatever crosses Graves’ mind at the moment – sometimes intriguing, but often just shy of nonsensical – this free-ranging film will likely strain the patience and goodwill of most viewers, though the musician’s fans will likely find much more to appreciate.

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In Theatres: ROBIN WILLIAMS: COME INSIDE MY MIND

photo by Mark Sennet

Coming to theatres this Friday, July 13:
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: DARK MONEY

photo by Eric Phillips-Horst

Coming to theatres this Friday, July 13:
DARK MONEY

Director:
Kimberly Reed

Premiere:
Sundance 2018

Select Festivals:
Nantucket, Big Sky, Full Frame, AFI Docs, Boulder, Martha’s Vineyard, Florida, Ashland, Cleveland, Freep, Montclair, Dallas, Nashville, Telluride Mountainfilm

About:
Montana serves as a case study for the dangerous impact of Citizens United on politics.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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On DVD: BRONX GOTHIC

Coming to DVD today, Tuesday, July 10:
BRONX GOTHIC

Director:
Andrew Rossi

Premiere:
Full Frame 2017

Select Festivals:
Provincetown, Maryland, Black Harvest, Milwaukee, Spokane

About:
An in-depth exploration of a performer and her acclaimed one-woman show.

Okwui Okpokwasili’s one-woman show, also titled “Bronx Gothic,” revolves around an apparently autobiographical series of written exchanges between a young Okpokwasili and a more experienced friend. The writer/artist developed the performance as a way to explore the experiences of growing up as a black female, and, on a larger scale, to combat society’s efforts to keep females ignorant about or ashamed of their own bodies. As demonstrated in Rossi’s portrait, the piece is intentionally, unabashedly confrontational, meant to force the audience to encounter Okpokwasili on her own terms, whether that’s in uncomfortably watching her dance in a frenzy in the extended opening, listening to her read a graphic exchange about teenage girls’ burgeoning sexuality, or enduring a litany of race- and body-shaming obscenities to which those two characters are subjected. Following her over the three months during which the piece was toured around the country, Rossi weaves together clips from the show with revealing talkbacks between the artist and audience members; more guarded moments with her young daughter and husband, the play’s director; and, most refreshingly, interviews with Okpokwasili’s more grounded, less heady Nigerian parents, among others. As with pretty much any one-person show, Okpokwasili’s is to some degree self-indulgent, and the film could have been more judicious about tempering the somewhat repetitive exegesis of the piece with more biographical elements that could have served as a counterpoint to the extremes of the content of the performance. Still, the revelatory and raw power in Okpokwasili’s work comes through clearly.

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On VOD: GETTING NAKED: A BURLESQUE STORY

Coming to VOD today, Tuesday, July 10:
GETTING NAKED: A BURLESQUE STORY

Director:
James Lester

Premiere:
Venice 2017 (Venice Days)

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Cleveland, Newport Beach, Berkshire, Greenwich, Florida, SF DocFest

About:
An inside look at the lives of several contemporary burlesque performers.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD: THE MAN WHO SAW TOO MUCH

Coming to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, July 10:
THE MAN WHO SAW TOO MUCH

Director:
Trisha Ziff

Premiere:
Hot Docs 2016

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Duabi, Raindance, Morelia, AFI Docs, San Francisco Latino, St Louis, Ambulante

About:
An exploration of the work of a noted Mexican crime scene photographer.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Even as a child, Enrique Metinides was obsessed with images, photographing car accidents in his Mexico City neighborhood and snapping pictures at the local morgue. Tabloids soon started publishing his photos, beginning his three-decade career as a crime photographer. Through Metinides’ compelling work, which often captures not only gruesome scenes of human tragedy but also the curious reactions of onlookers, Trisha Ziff explores our morbid fascination with death and accidents.

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On DVD: SUPERGIRL

Coming to DVD tomorrow, Tuesday, July 10:
SUPERGIRL

Director:
Jessie Auritt

Premiere:
Hamptons 2016

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Big Sky Doc, Cucalorus, Slamdance, Doc Edge, Cleveland, Sarasota, RiverRun, Florida, Montclair, Annapolis, Milwaukee, Woods Hole, Jewish fests in Philadelphia, Palm Beach, Hartford, Seattle, Washington, San Francisco, and London

About:
A portrait of the world’s strongest girl.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On TV: THE WORKERS CUP

Coming to PBS’s POV this coming Monday, July 9:
THE WORKERS CUP

Director:
Adam Sobel

Premiere:
Sundance 2017

Select Festivals:
CPH:DOX, Hot Docs, Sheffield, It’s All True, Docs Against Gravity, Vilnius, Doc Edge, Human Rights Watch, Sydney, Zurich, Carthage, Cinema Verité, Palm Springs

About:
Migrant workers building Qatar’s World Cup infrastructure compete in their own soccer tournament.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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On DVD: TURN IT AROUND: THE STORY OF EAST BAY PUNK

Coming to DVD today, Friday, July 6:
TURN IT AROUND: THE STORY OF EAST BAY PUNK

Director:
Corbett Redford

Premiere:
SF DocFest 2017

About:
An exhaustive chronicle of three decades of punk in California’s Bay Area.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: WHITNEY

WHITNEY | Image © Stefano Baroni

Coming to theatres tomorrow, Friday, July 6:
WHITNEY

Director:
Kevin Macdonald

Premiere:
Cannes 2018

Select Festivals:
Edinburgh, Sydney, Munich, Biografilm

About:
A candid exploration of the rise and fall of Whitney Houston.

Kevin Macdonald’s film on Houston is the second within a year, following the compelling WHITNEY. “CAN I BE ME” by Nick Broomfield and Rudi Dolezal. While the latter drew largely from interviews with friends and associates of the late singer, as well as intimate backstage footage, this latest, heartbreaking biography has the participation of Houston’s family and close confidantes, and through them an archive of early recordings of Houston. In the tragedy of the celebrated but troubled singer’s life, there’s ample room for both films, and, to Macdonald’s credit, he hasn’t created a bowdlerized version of Whitney’s story to placate the family. Elements that one might have feared would be excised in a semi-authorized film remain, such as a consideration of the performer’s same-sex relationship with Robyn Crawford, even if given less import or space as in the previous film, and with the homophobic resentment displayed by one of Houston’s brothers left unexplored. The helmer also is provided with a bombshell of childhood sexual abuse suffered by Whitney (and at least one sibling) by a family member, a charged revelation that unfortunately is not unpacked enough and instead is left to linger menacingly and somewhat irresponsibly in the background. While Macdonald’s treatment of Houston’s rise puts to the fore the influence of family members on the development of her talent and career, correcting the long-propagated myth that Clive Davis “created” her, the director seems far more interested in exploring the singer’s sad decline and tragic death at 48 – as well as the even sadder fate of her neglected, troubled daughter soon after. Perhaps fittingly, Whitney is felt more as an absence than a presence as this aspect of her story develops, with only occasional moments of her singing coming through to remind us of what was lost.

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