Category Archives: Releases

On TV: THE RETURN

large_the-returnComing to PBS’s POV tonight, Monday, May 23: THE RETURN

Kelly Duane De La Vega and Katie Galloway’s intimate look at the challenges faced by recently-released prisoners had its world premiere at Tribeca last month, winning an audience award. It also screened at San Francisco, as well as several community screenings around the country in the lead-up to its national PBS broadcast.

Until a 2012 proposition passed, California had one of the most punishing Three Strikes laws in the nation. Repeat offenders found themselves subject to life in prison, often for minor crimes. With the success of Prop 36, prisoners incarcerated under the draconian law found new hope, suddenly eligible for re-sentencing and, in some cases, release. Though tackling a large subject, De La Vega and Galloway wisely constrain themselves to a handful of subjects, including newly-released lifers Bilal and Kenneth, and attorneys from Stanford’s Justice Advocacy Project, who fight for the rights of other Three Strikes prisoners. While the latter offer valuable insight into the negative effect of this harsh sentencing, particularly among people of color, the poor, and the mentally ill, the film’s primary strength is in Bilal and Kenneth’s stories. As these men readjust to life on the outside, attempt to find gainful employment, try to re-establish bonds with family, and resist addiction, the true impact of mass incarceration is palpably felt.

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In Theatres: THE OTHER SIDE

other sideComing to theatres today, Friday, May 20: THE OTHER SIDE

Roberto Minervini’s hybrid portrait of Louisiana outsiders had its world premiere at Cannes last year. Other festival appearances have included Toronto, Karlovy Vary, Biografilm, Bergen, Athens, Rio, Palm Springs, True/False, Goteborg, Docs Against Gravity, and the Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Art of the Real.

Like his previous work, the Italian director offers an outside perspective on Americans living on the margins of conventional society, filtered through a hybrid approach that casts his protagonists as versions of themselves. In this case, Minervini turns his attention to the backwoods of Louisiana, initially focusing on the relationship between addicts Mark, a drug-dealer, and Lisa, his girlfriend, though peppered with other local denizens who spend their time on camera railing against President Obama. After the couple move off-frame, the film shifts gear to profile a paranoid militia convinced that the federal government will soon declare martial law and take away their guns. It’s a aesthetically stunning yet intellectually disquieting look at the extremes of American society, but one which informs the divisive, frustrated, and hate-fueled invective that has risen to the fore in recent years, particularly in this election cycle.

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On DVD/VOD: SONG OF LAHORE

13SONGLAHORE-master768Coming to DVD and VOD today, Friday, May 20: SONG OF LAHORE

Andy Schocken and Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy’s crosscultural jazz doc made its bow at Tribeca last year. Screenings have followed at IDFA, Sydney, Melbourne, Hamptons, Heartland, and Dubai.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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In Theatres: ALMOST HOLY

ALMOST-HOLYComing to theatres tomorrow, Friday, May 20: ALMOST HOLY

Steve Hoover’s portrait of a controversial do-gooder made its debut at Tribeca last year, under its original title, CROCODILE GENNADIY. The doc’s festival circuit has included IDFA, Hamptons, ZagrebDox, Tallinn Black Nights, Maryland, Heartland, San Francisco DocFest, Sidewalk, Bergen, Portland, and One World, among others.

For years, pastor Gennadiy Mokhnenko has waged a crusade to save the children of his struggling nation, Ukraine. He regularly patrols Mariupol, picking up abandoned and lost street children, often via force, and brings them to his rehab center, Pilgrim Republic, to kick drugs and a dead-end existence of abuse. While some celebrate his vigilantism, others decry it, making him a frequent guest on local television programs. In his own mind, he’s a savior, and one willing to resort to extreme measures when his corrupt government seems little-inclined to intervene. Mokhnenko makes for a compelling, if confounding, hero and anti-hero in equal parts, a caring father figure for the children he saves – or attempts to – but also a violent demagogue, though one who is often surprisingly funny and charming. He offers himself uncensored for Hoover’s camera, while the filmmaker intercuts Mokhnenko’s relative successes in the early 2000s with present-day footage that tackles Ukraine’s descent into war and chaos even as he continues on his seemingly endless – and hopeless – mission.

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In Theatres: PERVERT PARK

pervert parkComing to theatres tomorrow, Friday, May 20: PERVERT PARK

Frida Barkfors and Lasse Barkfors’ intimate profile of an outsider enclave debuted at CPH:DOX in 2014. It went on to screen at Sundance, where it won a special jury award, as well as at BAMcinemaFest, Hot Docs, Dokufest, New Zealand, Sarasota, San Francisco Doc Fest, and Minneapolis, among other events.

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

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On TV: SONIC SEA

SONIC-STILL-WEBComing to the Discovery Channel tomorrow, Thursday, May 19: SONIC SEA

Michelle Dougherty and Daniel Hinerfeld’s exploration of the impact of noise on marine life debuted at Wild & Scenic at the beginning of the year. Other fests have included Big Sky, Washington DC’s Environmental, DocuWest, Provincetown, Princeton Environmental, and San Francisco Green, as well as a host of specialized screenings around the world. Discovery’s worldwide broadcast is part of its Discovery Impact series.

Dougherty and Hinerfeld’s midlength offers viewers an engaging, empathetic view of sealife and the invisible factors that are endangering it – namely, manmade noise. With sound-based communication pivotal to the well-being of dolphins, whales, and other marine life, the incursion of humans into this sonic landscape has been traumatic. Beyond increased traffic by noisy industrial vessels and the use of sonar, the film notes the growth of the practice of triggering underwater explosions to prospect for oil – all contributing to a cacophony below the surface that has led to tragic death and confusion. This well-made film makes for a solid call to action on an under-reported environmental issue, thought it begs for expansion to a full-length project.

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On DVD/VOD: THE WINDING STREAM

windingNew to DVD/VOD this week: THE WINDING STREAM

Beth Harrington’s exploration of the musical Carter and Cash families made its bow at SXSW in 2014. Its festival circuit also included Cleveland, Nashville, Atlanta, the Southern Circuit, Woods Hole, Sound + Vision, DokuFest, Hot Springs Doc, New Orleans’ filmOrama, Galway, and St Louis.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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On DVD/VOD: TROUBLEMAKERS: THE STORY OF LAND ART

TROUBLEMAKERS-KEYComing to DVD and VOD today, Tuesday, May 17: TROUBLEMAKERS: THE STORY OF LAND ART

James Crump’s chronicle of the expansion of art out of the gallery premiered at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art last Fall. Screenings followed at DOC NYC, New York Film Festival, St Louis, Milan’s Fondazione Prada, and Art Basel Miami, among others.

I previously wrote about the doc here.

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Special Screening & In Theatres: WEINER

weinerComing to NYC’s Rooftop Films tomorrow, Wednesday, May 18 and to theatres this Friday, May 20: WEINER

Josh Kriegman and Elyse Steinberg’s surprisingly candid look at a once-disgraced politician’s ill-fated comeback attempt had its world premiere at Sundance this year, where it won the US Documentary Grand Jury Prize. Additional fest berths have included True/False, New Directors/NewFilms, Hot Docs, Full Frame, Sarasota, RiverRun, Nashville, IFF Boston, San Francisco, Montclair, and Sydney.

I profiled the doc before Sundance here.

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On TV: OPERATION POPCORN

popcornComing to PBS’s America ReFramed tomorrow, Tuesday, May 17: OPERATION POPCORN

David Grabias’ investigation of conspiracy and arms dealing among a refugee community had its world premiere at Minneapolis-St Paul last year. Screenings have followed at Big Sky, Kansas City, CAAMfest, Hawaii, and San Diego Asian fests, among others. Its broadcast now is tied to Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.

Recruited by the CIA to assist the United States against North Vietnam, the Hmong people of Laos found themselves escaping communist persecution by becoming refugees in America in the aftermath of the Vietnam War. Decades later, the close-knit community learns about continued human rights abuses against their people back in Laos, inspiring Hmong-Americans such as Locha Thao to become activists. Grabias focuses on a strange episode in which Thao works with mysterious American partners to procure arms in the hopes of overthrowing the communist Lao government – despite the apparent objections of venerated American-based Hmong leaders like General Vang Pao. Unfortunately, Grabias fails to bring much clarity or a compelling sense of storytelling to the proceedings – overcomplicating an already fuzzy story by fleetingly introducing distracting, unrelated elements that cast further doubt upon his main subject’s trustworthiness – resulting in an unsatisfying project as a whole.

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