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[Mark Rabinowitz] Here, for your reading pleasure, is another lovely collection of letters and manybe the occasional number, as they are put together into an order which may (or may not) make some sense about documentary films and whatnot. [Mark Rabinowitz] No fewer than six docs opened in New York this week, five of them today and one, "Stranded: I've Come From a Plane That Crashed on the Mountains" on Wednesday the 22nd. I'm tempted to lower that to 5 and 4, but the New York Times decided to review Amos Gitai's "News From Home/News From House" even though it's screening as part of a Museum of Modern Art exhibition and not in a "traditional" theatrical release. But really, who am I to argue with the Old Gray Lady? First on my list, if for no other reason than because I think it's a fantastic film is Douglas Gordon and Philippe Parreno's "Zidane: A Twenty-First Century Portrait" which received a very unfair (IMHO) 53%, on Rotten Tomatoes and hasn't been ranked yet by Metacritic.com. [Mark Rabinowitz] So Vanity Fair has compiled their top 25 documentary films as decided by their editors. I have to say, it's a rather odd list. I mean, you have 25 slots and you used 4 for two Leni Riefenstahl and two Robert Flaherty films? I mean, who am I to say what belongs and what doesn't but really? They conveniently left off any info about what criteria they used to come up with the list, but clearly multiple films by he same director were ok, because in addition to Riefenstahl and Flaherty, Al Maysles is twice represented ("Gimmee Shelter" & "Grey Gardens") as is Michael Moore ("Bowling For Columbine" and "Farenheit 9/11"). 11 of the films are from the past 18 years and 4 are from before 1939, leaving 10 for the 50 years in between. I don't know if that matters, but I find it a little odd. I mean, nothing from the 40's or 50s, two from the 60's, 5 from the 70's, only 2 from the 80s, 7 from the 1990s and 5 from the 2000s. » Continue reading "Vanity Fair Names Top 25 Docs-No Wiseman, Herzog, Morris. Do We Care?"[Mark Rabinowitz] AJ Schnack reports on yet another highly-regarded doc getting the shaft due to the irrational, arbitrary and unfair qualifying rules applied to docs. It seems that since it was set to play the New York Film Festival, Ari Folman's "Waltz With Bashir" was unable to qualify before the end of the Oscar®-qualifying period on August 31st because the NYFF's organizers, the Film Society of Lincoln Center told the film's distributors, Sony Pictures Classics that even an "under the radar" run would disqualify it for taking part in the Festival. That's a fair call by the FSLC and one that wouldn't have to be made if the qualifying dates for docs was the same as for fiction films. What's wrong with December 31st for docs, hmmmmmm? The fact is, these rules are unfair and need to be changed! [Mark Rabinowitz] What's the buzz? I'll tell you what's a happening! Moore Increases New Film's Free Availability Southern Poverty Law Center To Premier Chavez Doc [Peter Knegt] Here's some links to some doc-related news and views across the internet, including news from Independent Film Week at indieWIRE.com, an unsung TIFF doc and some news out of the UK regarding potential new evidence in the Omagh bombing of 1998. SnagFilms CEO Talks Future [Mark Rabinowitz] Paris Hilton is pissed about something or other and "Man on Wire" keeps going strong! Catch Her While You Can! Man on Wire Passes $1.5 Million [Peter Knegt] Mark's off to Denver, so I'm gonna do my best to fill in re: this weekend's doc offerings. Debuting on 18 screens, the highest profile release is certainly Patrick Creadon's national debt expose, "I.O.U.S.A.." The film is managing decent reviews, with a 69 on Metacritic and an 83% on Rotten Tomatoes. Some critics in particular were all over it, like Roger Ebert, who said that the film "accomplishes an amazing thing" in that it "explains the national debt, the foreign trade deficit, the decrease in personal savings, how the prime interest rate works, and the weakness of our leaders." SF Gate ran a non-critical piece on the film, looking into its interesting evolution. Another freshman doc this is weekend is Tia Lessin and Carl Deal's Sundance winner "Trouble the Water." Opening at the IFC Center and ImageNation at The Faison Firehouse Theater in New York and the Regal Westpark 8 and Sunset 5 in the Los Angeles area, the film is garnering expected praise. It has a 78 on Metacritic and an 93% on Rotten Tomatoes. indieWIRE reviewed the film earlier this week, nothing that "Water" is "full of revealing moments and painfully experienced truths." » Continue reading "DOCS-A-POPPIN' 8.22.08 | National Debt, Hurricane Katrina, Civil Rights and Richard Serra"[Mark Rabinowitz] What's a happ'nin around the Internets, these days? Oh, just some reviews, some new distribution ideas and other bits n' bobs. Check 'em out, yo! "Bird's Nest" Pre-Release Olympics-Sized Tease-o-Rama! [Mark Rabinowitz] After a string of rather high profile doc releases, this week is relatively quiet but that doesn't mean it's short on quality. It does, however, mean that there's little or no mass critical response for me to link to. "Never Apologize: A Personal Visit With Lindsay Anderson" is Mike Kaplan's film of Malcolm McDowell's one man performance and it gets some good word from Jeannette Catsoulis at the New York Times, calling McDowell "thoroughly engaging" and while I haven't seen the film, I now want to. It opens today at the Walter Reade Theater in New York. Nathan Lee is short and to the point in his review of Thomas G. Miller's "One Bad Cat: The Reverend Albert Wagner Story," writing that the film "brings fresh light to the artist profile not only through his choice of subject, but also by his direct confrontation with the discomforting nature of Mr. Wagner's work...." [Mark Rabinowitz] On Tuesday I was lucky enough to serve as a plus 1 to the HBO premiere screening of Timothy Greenfield-Sanders and Elvis Mitchell's "The Black List: Vol. 1," hosted by Time Warner Chairman of the Board, Richard D. Parsons. The pre-screening reception was very well attended and the spread was pretty nice. The invite said "cocktails and not that I am complaining, but since when do short ribs fall under "cocktails?" The Rabbi loves him some short ribs! As for the film itself, it's pretty damn amazing. I can honestly say I have never seen a film that so clearly, simply and beautifully portrayed what it means to be Black in America. My mother Joanne Grant was a very proud mixed-race woman who, more often than not, identified as black and had she lived to see the film I am certain she would have been as moved by it as I. Of course, since she was herself a filmmaker and not shy about getting up in people's faces, I am sure she would have wanted in on the project and knowing her, she'd either have been up on the screen or behind the scenes.
[Mark Rabinowitz] A roundup of some of the doc news and features currently floating around as ones and zeros. Louuuuuuuuuu America The...Hackneyed? [Mark Rabinowitz] There are plenty of reviews of James Marsh's recent Magnolia Pictures release "Man on Wire" out there. In fact, I bet there are half a dozen on the indieWIRE blogs alone, but I wanted to add my two cents. This is beyond a well made film. It's a documentary cum heist film-suspense thriller, which is saying quite a bit for a documentary, really. Not only that, but it's gorgeously photographed and edited. It's exactly what the Cinema Eye Honors folks mean when they talk about the use of craft in documentary. The fact that Marsh, along with a supremely talented crew and a raft of fantastic archival footage have created a suspense film where no suspense should realistically exist is exceptional. We know Philippe Petit didn't fall. Yet we're locked to the screen, with "Can he do it?" running through our brains. For me, I simply cannot compute. What he's done is so far out of the realm of believability that the suspense was real. I simply could not believe that anyone would do something so patently insane. The thing is, he's not insane, at least not by any conventional measure. He really is the ultimate dreamer. He dreamt of the thing that no one else on the planet could even imagine and he pulled it off with a profound beauty seen only in the rarest of circumstances.
Photo © 2008 Jean-Louis Blondeau / Polaris Images [Mark Rabinowitz] Over on indieWIRE's interview with "American Teen" director Nanette Burstein, the comments are more about Jeff Kreines and Joel DeMott’s 1982 verite doc "Seventeen" than they are about Burstein's film. I suspect this will change once the latter hits screens tomorrow, but for now, the earlier film's getting some notice and I'll admit, I've never seen it. However, after reading the comments on indieWIRE and finding this piece (warning: Spoilers!) from SF 360 back in August of '06, I am anxious to see both films! What do you think? For those of you who have seen both, what are the differences? Similarities? Are they both valid? If not, why not? |