Category Archives: Releases

On VOD: MOTHER WITH A GUN

mother_with_a_gunComing to VOD today, Wednesday, February 1:
MOTHER WITH A GUN

Director:
Jeff Daniels

Premiere:
Antenna Doc 2016

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, Atlanta Jewish

About:
A portrait of the Jewish Defense League, through the lens of its current, unlikely leader.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC, saying:
Founded by Rabbi Meir Kahane in New York City in 1968, the Jewish Defense League advocates any means necessary to stop antisemitism. Once considered the most active terrorist organization in the United States for its use of armed response and preventative violence, the JDL is currently led by Shelley Rubin. With candor, Daniels’ film charts Rubin’s path to extremism, relaying how an archetypal good Jewish girl defied family and community expectations for love and purpose – at a deep personal cost.

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On TV: THIS WAS THE XFL

this_was_the_xflComing to ESPN tomorrow, Thursday, February 2:
THIS WAS THE XFL

Director:
Charlie Ebersol

Premiere:
DOC NYC 2016

About:
An entertaining reappraisal of the much-hyped but disastrous alternate to the NFL.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
The kind of sports story even non-sports fans will love, Charlie Ebersol’s doc chronicles the ill-fated history of the XFL, the no-holds-barred brainchild of NBC’s Dick Ebersol and WWE’s Vince McMahon. Launched to fanfare in 2001, the extreme football league lasted only a single season, making up rules – and breaking them – as it went along. Ebersol’s son Charlie directs this wild look back at what went wrong with the XFL and its role in redefining broadcast sports.

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On VOD: FROM THIS DAY FORWARD

FROMTHISDAYFORWARD-KEYComing to VOD today, Wednesday, February 1:
FROM THIS DAY FORWARD

Director:
Sharon Shattuck

Premiere:
Full Frame 2015

Select Festivals:
DOC NYC, AFI Docs, Hot Docs, Framline, Outfest, Camden, Traverse City, Frameline, Outfest, LGBT fests in Seattle, North Carolina, Milwaukee, and Austin

About:
A portrait of the filmmaker’s father, who transitioned from male to female.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD/VOD: DR FEELGOOD: DEALER OR HEALER?

dr feelgoodNew to DVD and VOD this week:
DR FEELGOOD: DEALER OR HEALER?

Director:
Eve Marson

Premiere:
Los Angeles 2016

Select Festivals:
Austin, Tallgrass

About:
An exploration of the opioid epidemic through the case of a controversial medical practitioner.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: MR GAGA

mr_gaga_720_432Coming to theatres tomorrow, Wednesday, February 1:
MR GAGA

Director:
Tomer Heymann

Premiere:
Jerusalem 2015

Select Festivals:
IDFA, Hot Docs, SXSW, London, New Orleans, Vilnius, Full Frame, DOK Fest Munich, DOXA, Transilvania, Seattle, Tel Aviv, Sheffield, Shanghai, SF Jewish, Miami Jewish, New Zealand, Bergen, Sao Paulo, RIDM

About:
A portrait of acclaimed Israeli dancer/choreographer Ohad Naharin.

An eight year labor of love for Heymann, this dance doc pieces together the four decade career of Naharin, who only began dancing at 22, after his compulsory service in the Israeli army. His early promise drew the attention of Martha Graham, and later Maurice Bejart, but his iconoclastic spirit proved an ill fit for their modern dance companies, leading Naharin to develop his own work, including Gaga, the movement language which lends this film its name – not at all a reference to the pop star Lady Gaga, though the too insular title may very well lead to confusion and disappointment for some audiences. Viewed as a pioneering figure in modern dance, Naharin, who, since 1990, has been the artistic director of Israel’s Batsheva Dance Company, reflects on his long career, including a freedom of expression standoff on the occasion of Israel’s 50th anniversary that elevated him to the status of national hero. Heymann does an admirable job in synthesizing the choreographer’s career and showcasing impressive footage of his dances, which will draw dance film fans, while the political undertones of his work may also provide an entry to some audiences, like me, otherwise indisposed to dance docs.

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On TV: THE RACE UNDERGROUND

race undergroundComing to PBS’s American Experience tonight, Tuesday, January 31:
THE RACE UNDERGROUND

Director:
Michael Rossi

Premiere:
American Experience (January 2017)

About:
The story of America’s first subway.

On September 1, 1897, the first passengers descended into the Earth, taking a ride on the country’s first subway line, in Boston MA. All told, 250,000 individuals braved the new technology that day, despite a long build-up of fears of gas explosions, superstitions of traveling close to the netherworld, and political obstacles that called into question whether the engineering project would ever be completed. Rossi reveals the origins of the MBTA and its architects, and if he employs the conventional PBS house style, dominated by narration and talking heads, the project nevertheless offers an illuminating look back at the dawn of this vital part of America’s public transport infrastructure. While the title suggests a competition between Boston and other cities, notably New York City, to achieve a subway system, Rossi’s film is almost exclusively concerned with the challenges faced by the former in pulling off their subway and barely makes mention of NYC’s own efforts – the latter did not open until 1904. At the core of Rossi’s film, which is based on urban historian Doug Most’s book by the same name, is Frank Sprague, a young inventor who revolutionized mass transportation with his electric motor-powered trolley cars. A largely unheralded figure in the shadow of the legendary Thomas Edison, who eventually bought his patents and slapped his name on them, Sprague persevered, with the support of real estate mogul Henry Whitney, despite a huge public fight over disturbing the Boston Common.

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On VOD: MIRIAM: HOME DELIVERY

MIRIAMHOMEDELIVERY-KEYNew to VOD on iTunes today, Tuesday, January 31:
MIRIAM: HOME DELIVERY

Director:
Juliet Jordan

Premiere:
DOC NYC 2015

Select Festivals:
Ambulante

About:
A portrait of a modern-day midwife.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Juliet Jordan offers an inside look at what some consider to be the world’s second-oldest profession: midwifery. As a homebirth midwife, Miriam performs a service once commonplace, but now increasingly rare as the process of childbirth firmly moved to a hospital setting. The filmmaker immerses viewers in Miriam’s mission, driving along with her across NYC as she assists expectant mothers, from her clients among the Orthodox Jewish community to the dramatic home birth that falls during the Hurricane Sandy blackout.

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In Theatres: OKLAHOMA CITY

oklahoma cityComing to theatres this Friday, February 3:
OKLAHOMA CITY

Director:
Barak Goodman

Premiere:
Sundance 2017

About:
A look back at the events which led to the 1995 terrorist bombing of the Oklahoma City Federal Building.

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

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On VOD: LOVE CRIMES OF KABUL

love_crimes_in_kabul_2.470x264New to VOD at iTunes today, Monday, January 30:
LOVE CRIMES OF KABUL

Director:
Tanaz Eshaghian

Premiere:
Hot Docs 2011

Select Festivals:
Jerusalem, Human Rights Watch, Noor, Movies That Matter

About:
A inside look at an Afghan prison for moral crimes.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On VOD: GIMME DANGER

gimme dangerComing to VOD tomorrow, Tuesday, January 31:
GIMME DANGER

Director:
Jim Jarmusch

Premiere:
Cannes 2016

Select Festivals:
Toronto, New York, Vancouver, Austin, New Zealand, Sydney, Melbourne, Sarajevo, Helsinki, Mill Valley, Rio, Adelaide, Woodstock, Leeds

About:
An appreciation for the influential band The Stooges.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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