Category Archives: Releases

In Theatres: NE ME QUITTE PAS (DON’T LEAVE ME)

ne_me_quitte_pas_still_550x238-detail-mainComing to NYC’s Museum of the Moving Image tomorrow, Friday, November 18: NE ME QUITTE PAS (DON’T LEAVE ME)

Sabine Lubbe Bakker and Niels van Koevorden’s profile of a pair of alcoholic friends debuted at IDFA in 2013. It went on to screen at Tribeca, Sydney, Traverse City, London, Chicago, Talinn Black Nights, Cleveland, and One World, among other events.

Living in a remote Belgian village, Marcel and Bob are old friends, and they’re both prone to excessive drinking and long, often very funny, conversations. As the film opens, the middle-aged Marcel’s marriage has just ended, and he turns to the older Bob for companionship and, it’s clear, an escape from his deep depression. Even as the pair provide unexpected onscreen comedy, their talk turns to joking about suicide methods, and Marcel recognizes his problems with drinking. The filmmakers maintain just the right balance between humor and pathos, finding genuine comedy in the men’s rapport without either condescension or pity as they craft an indelible portrait.

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On VOD: MISSING PEOPLE

MISSINGPEOPLE-KEYComing to VOD via Sundance Now today, Thursday, November 17: MISSING PEOPLE

David Shapiro’s portrait of a driven art collector with a tragic past had its world premiere at Hot Docs last year. It went on to screen at DOC NYC, New Orleans, Los Angeles, Hamptons, Atlanta, and Sarasota, among other events.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Martina, the director of a prominent NYC gallery, is an obsessive collector of the work of late outsider artist Roy Ferdinand, which chronicled a violent, sexual pre-Katrina New Orleans. When she meets Ferdinand’s sisters, they are drawn together by common experience: Martina too is haunted by the spectre of her own brother, the 14-year-old victim of an unsolved murder in 1978 Queens. David Shapiro intricately weaves together the stories of these two brothers in this indelible nonfiction mystery.

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On VOD: 14 MINUTES FROM EARTH

14 minutesNew to VOD this week: 14 MINUTES FROM EARTH

Jerry Kolber, Adam “Tex” Davis, Trey Nelson, and Erich Sturm’s look at a stratospheric sky dive debuted at Tribeca this year. It also screened at the San Francisco Doc Fest. Gunpowder & Sky now releases the doc to VOD platforms including Amazon Video, Google Play, iTunes, Microsoft Movies & TV, Sony PlayStation, and Vudu.

Alan Eustace, Google’s Senior Vice-President of Knowledge, comes up with what seems like an impossible plan: traveling up to the stratosphere without a rocketship – using a balloon instead – and then free-falling back to Earth. The film chronicles his daring mission, which includes designing and manufacturing a custom spacesuit, developing the balloon, conducting tests, and ultimately making the jump. It’s not an uninteresting idea for a doc, but the execution here is so utterly non-cinematic that it sinks the project. Instead, the four credited directors take an approach that mimics an overproduced television science program, and is chiefly marred by incessant, unnecessary expository narration and manipulative music and sound design, not to mention very surface-level talking head comments from participants.

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In Theatres: OFF THE RAILS

off_the_railsComing to theatres tomorrow, Friday, November 18: OFF THE RAILS

Adam Irving’s chronicle of a man’s obsession with NYC transit made its debut at Full Frame. Screenings have also included DOC NYC, Hot Docs, Sarasota, RiverRun, Newport Beach, San Francisco Doc, Provincetown, Sidewalk, Woods Hole, DocUtah, Hot Springs Doc, Savannah, Denver, and St Louis.

I previously wrote about the film for DOC NYC’s program, saying:
Irving’s film tells the stranger-than-fiction story of serial MTA imposter Darius McCollum, who has been jailed more than 30 times for illegally driving buses and conducting subway trains. After finding sanctuary from childhood bullies in the subway, McCollum, who has Asperger’s syndrome, developed an obsession with the transit system. Though he has never missed a stop in his unorthodox 35-year “career” operating mass transit vehicles, unforgiving authorities have damned him to the revolving door of the criminal justice system.

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On DVD/VOD: MAGICIANS: LIFE IN THE IMPOSSIBLE

magicians_1New to DVD and VOD this week: MAGICIANS: LIFE IN THE IMPOSSIBLE

Christoph Baaden and Marcie Hume’s portrait of professional prestidigitators debuted at Hot Docs this year. It also screened at Napa Valley and Philadelphia. It now comes to DVD and to VOD platforms including iTunes, Amazon, Vudu, and YouTube.

Baaden and Hume follow four men whose lives revolve around magic. Each has seen some level of success – Jan Rouven headlines a popular Las Vegas spectacle, Brian Gillis was a regular on Johnny Carson’s TONIGHT SHOW, Jon Armstrong is on the Board of he Magic Castle, and David Minkin has been on television several times – but it’s still not enough. The film follows their efforts to make a bigger mark, noting the sacrifices they’ve made for their obsessions and their desire for more recognition. While featuring likeable enough protagonists, there are unfortunately just too many of them for one film, and they don’t all feel essential to the story being told, lending a somewhat repetitious feel to the project. Were the film to have instead focused on just Gillis and Rouven, for example, highlighting illusionists more or less at opposite ends of their careers, the contrast might have made for an ultimately more compelling film. Still, Baaden and Hume have created a solid survey that does showcase some impressive tricks.

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In Theatres: UNCLE HOWARD

uncle howardComing to theatres this Friday, November 18: UNCLE HOWARD

Aaron Brookner’s quest to rediscover his late uncle’s body of work had its world premiere at Sundance this year. Its festival run also included Berlin, New York, Seattle, BAFICI, Jerusalem, Warsaw, San Sebastian, Biografilm, and Cleveland, among other events.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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On DVD: DEMON ON WHEELS

demon on wheelsNew to DVD this week: DEMON ON WHEELS

Christina Eliopoulos’ tale of a man and his classic Mustang premiered at the Carlisle Ford Nationals auto show last year before its VOD release.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: NOTES ON BLINDNESS

notes on blindnessComing to NYC’s Film Forum today, Wednesday, November 16: NOTES ON BLINDNESS

Peter Middleton and James Spinney’s immersive recreation of a man’s loss of vision debuted at Sundance this year. Screenings followed at Karlovy Vary, Sheffield, Tribeca, Cleveland, Sydney, Melbourne, New Zealand, Jerusalem, and San Francisco, among other events.

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

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In Theatres: THE ILLINOIS PARABLES

illinois parablesComing to NYC’s Anthology Film Archives tomorrow, Wednesday, November 16: THE ILLINOIS PARABLES

Deborah Stratman’s experimental rumination on landscapes and beliefs had its bow at Sundance this year. It went on to screen at Berlin, True/False, Ann Arbor, London, Poland’s American fest, New York, and RIDM, among other events.

I profiled the film before Sundance here.

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On DVD/VOD: WHEN TWO WORLDS COLLIDE

when two worldsComing to DVD and VOD today, Tuesday, November 15: WHEN TWO WORLDS COLLIDE

Heidi Brandenburg and Mathew Orzel’s look at the faceoff between Peru’s government and its indigenous people made its world premiere at Sundance this year, winning a special jury award. Its festival circuit also included Nantucket, Documenta Madrid, RiverRun, Minneapois-St Paul, Hot Docs, Montclair, Human Rights Watch, Sheffield, Shanghai, AFI Docs, and Docufest Kosovo.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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