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Wednesday November 11, 2009

'The Way We Get By' -- Thanking Those Who Serve

Please take time to gather your family to watch The Way We Get By in observance of Veteran's Day, showing tonight on PBS. This is a documentary about the troop greeters who devote their last years to being there to give a warm hello, a smile, and a thank you to the military as they leave the US to serve abroad or return from their stations.

Beginning as a seemingly idiosyncratic story about troop greeters - a group of senior citizens who gather daily at a small airport to thank American soldiers departing and returning from Iraq, the film quickly turns into a moving, unsettling and compassionate story about aging, loneliness, war and mortality.

This is not about war. It is about honor, meaning, devotion, and thanks.

P.O.V.: Season 22 Episode 13P.O.V.: Season 22 Episode 13 TV Schedule

Monday November 2, 2009

The Christians: The History of Christianity and Its Global Impact

Filmed on location in more than 30 countries, this 13-episode series covers the history of Christianity from the time of Jesus through "two thousand years of persecution, politics, and power." This DVD set has extras as well: a new introductory segment by host Bamber Gascoigne, a 16-page viewer's guide with highlights, questions to consider, avenues for further learning, a timeline, and more, The Cultures of the Cross and Christ in Art photo galleries, and Architects of the Faith, select bios of people influential to Christianity. This is Christianity as a historical force, its highs (acts of sacrifice and compassion, learning, great works of art and architecture) and its lows (persecution and atrocities). It covers the largest and oldest denominations, and the briefest off-shoots, the unchanging traditions and the agile adaptations, the controversies and the conflicts.

I have one set to give away to the first person who sends me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with the word "Christians" in the subject line. Good luck!



Monday November 2, 2009

The Life and Times of Hank Greenberg

In honor of the World Series, take a look at this documentary about baseball star Hank Greenberg.

Brilliant documentary-maker Aviva Kempner has created a gem of a movie to lift the spirit of anyone who cares about baseball -- or heroes.

Hank Greenberg was that rarest of sports stars, someone who was as good as his fans hoped he was -- in fact, he was even better. Over and over, in this movie, we see accomplished, distinguished men get teary-eyed as they talk about how much Hank Greenberg meant to them when they were growing up. Senator Carl Levin said, "Because he was a hero, I was a little bit of a hero, too." Lawyer-to-the-stars Alan Dershowitz says, "Baseball was our way of showing that we were as American as anyone else."

"We" meant Jews. Hank Greenberg was not the first Jewish baseball player, but he was the first one to be proudly Jewish. He did not change his name and he did not hide his religion. He missed a day of the World Series to observe Yom Kippur (though he did play on Rosh Hashanah, thanks to a clearance from a rabbi who was a baseball fan). And he was a star. Dershowitz said, "He was what they said Jews could never be."

Kempner combines stock footage and contemporary interviews with fans, friends, family, and teammates to give a glowing portrait of Greenberg, who died in 1986, and, as the title promises, of his era.

Greenberg faced a lot of prejudice. He played for the Detroit Tigers in a city whose leading citizen, Henry Ford, was a virulent anti-Semite. One of his teammates was a country boy who had never met a Jew before and literally expected Greenberg to have horns. But Greenberg never took it personally and never became bitter. He said that it made him work harder because if he failed, "I wasn't a bum; I was a Jewish bum." Not a religious or observant man, he was very aware of his role as a symbol, and, as a fan notes, "he wore his Jewishness on his sleeve and in his heart." At the end of his career, he helped support another baseball player he perhaps understood better than anyone -- Jackie Robinson.

Greenberg missed four seasons at the top of his career because he was serving in WWII. And at the end of his career he was impulsively traded by an owner who mistakenly thought he was thinking of leaving. He spoke of those incidents with regret, but without anger. One of the great treats of this movie is see not just how well Greenberg handled adversity, but how well he handled fame and success, remaining humble, honest, and dedicated through it all.

Perhaps most revealing of Greenberg's character was the one statistic that he cared about, in this most statistic-ridden of sports -- RBIs. He loved being the one who batted clean-up, "the guy that comes up at the clutch, changes the ball game, makes all the difference." He could have gone for the home run record, but he was the ultimate team player.

His teammates and friends talk, also, about his dedication. He was the hardest-working of ball-players, paying anyone he could find to pitch to him for extra batting practice and even stripping down in a friend's dress-making studio so he could examine his batting stance in a three-way mirror.

Parents should know that while younger kids might not understand the movie, there is nothing objectionable in it -- and how many of today's sports figures could inspire a documentary about which that statement could be made?

Families who see this movie should talk about America's history of prejudice and about the different ways that people handle adversity -- and success. Families who enjoy this movie will also enjoy Ken Burns' "Baseball" documentary, broadcast on PBS and available on video.

Wednesday October 28, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Movies, Musical

This is It

"This is It" is here to rescue us from the tabloids and remind us what true star power looks like. There are moments of aching sadness as we get a behind-the-scenes look at the concert tour that never happened, but it is the very intimacy of the preparation process that makes the film so enthralling. Jackson comes across as the consummate professional, always polite and appreciative but with a stunning mastery of the smallest detail and the biggest special effect in putting together what would have been a ground-breaking performance.

Jackson seems physically frail at times, conserving his voice and his energy in the musical numbers as the back-up dancers give it performance-level power every time. In one lovely moment, he falls so much in love with a song he is rehearsing that he cannot resist giving it full power and, as happens more than once in the course of the film, all of the people working on the show just stop to watch and listen, utterly entranced. In another moment, we glimpse his quick, private smile of satisfaction with a number that has come together. When he sings "I'll Be There," we can't help being reminded that even though he is gone, his performances will be a part of our lives forever.

There's a glimpse of the auditions, the dancers almost overcome with the chance to try out for what they consider the zenith of entertainment. He tells one musician to "let it simmer" and demonstrates a guitar riff for another. He is unfailingly appreciative and thoughtful, over and over thanking everyone and unfailingly respectful in giving direction, almost apologetic when he says that the earpiece is making it harder for him to hear. The endless series of bizarre outfits with their military stripes and Munchkin-like shoulders, seem irrelevant when we watch the way he interacts with people and the way he thinks about the songs and dances. Appropriately, the most thrilling moment is "Thriller." Jackson says he wants to take us places we have never been before, and in this combination concert film/documentary, he reminds us of the power of imagination and talent and the reason he was a star.

Thursday October 15, 2009

Interview: Joe Berlinger of 'Crude'

Crude is the latest documentary from Joe Berlinger, whose last film was the award-winning "Metallica: Some Kind of Monster." This movie explores a large, complex, international environmental lawsuit over damage allegedly inflicted by an oil company on a community in Ecuador. He also does the television show Iconoclasts, pairing interesting high-profile people with the people who inspire them. I spoke with him by phone about this new film.

NM: How did you gain the confidence of the people you were filming? Unlike your last subjects, Metallica, you were dealing with subjects who were not familiar with media.

JB: I would not necessarily distinguish them that way -- getting the trust of a media figure like Metallica or James Hetfield is no easier than getting the trust of these people. One of the amazing things about this experience was how unguarded and open people were and how easy it was to gain their trust. Metallica are not just any rock stars, they are all about male testosterone-fueled rage and not showing any weakness and to allow that to be put on screen was even more difficult.

When I made "Paradise Lost," a film about three teenagers falsely accused of devil-worshiping murders because of the clothes they wore and the music they listened to, and it was shot in 1993, just as the 24-hour news cycle as we know it today was kicking in and it was a very different mindset. It was the last time I felt in my career that we got that kind of access, total access to the families of the defendants, three families of the victims, the judge, the prosecutor, we filmed the trial. If we made the film today, it would not have been possible. There would be 50 satellite trucks, five Hollywood agents, book deals, that kind of thing has happened in the last five or ten years, who likes to dig in and tell a story over the long haul -- not what the media does -- it makes my job that much more difficult.

So one of the unexpected pleasures of "Crude" was I once again felt that freedom that I could take my camera anywhere in this country. The people involved were -- in a refreshing way -- un-media savvy, un-tainted, un-jaded. And these are people who have been wronged for a long time. I was surprised a little bit that a white person and an outsider had such ease. But what motivated me was not the lawsuit per se but I had an epiphany as I walked around the villages and saw the level of disregard that these people have suffered at the hands of others. For the first time I viewed this injustice toward them as part of the long continuum for the last 600-700 years. As I see people eating canned tuna instead because there are no longer fish from the nearby water, getting diseases they never got before, poisoned drinking water. Their lives have been devastated, first by missionaries and then by the oil companies. What made me want to see the film was seeing it in a larger context of displacement and mistreatment of indigenous people. I didn't want an "oh, we have to win the lawsuit," one-sided agitprop kind of film-making. That is not consistent with my style of film-making and it is actually less persuasive than my style which is kind of warts and all.

NM: That brings me to my next question. You make a real effort to be even-handed here. The movie certainly has a point of view but you let all sides make their own case. How do you make your point, stay even-handed, preserve your credibility, and still show what you have learned?

JB: Some filmmakers in the category of human rights and expose are afraid of a contrarian point of view, but I think it creates a viewing experience that is active instead of than passive. When a film has a singular point of view -- first of all, stylistically I don't believe in narration because I am a cinema verite film-maker. I want the audience to make up their own minds about what they are seeing. I believe the emotional truth of a situation rises clearly to the top. But a lot of film-makers start a film with a thesis and bang it over your head and have all their points adhere to that thesis. I embrace a contrarian point of view because that way the audience weighs the pros and cons and comes to their own conclusion. If you treat an audience member like a member of a jury they will make up their own minds and that is much more persuasive experience than telling them what you think they should think. Only people who already agree with you will see it. Any film where you want to affect social change you have to bring other people into the fold. You have a better chance of having people walk out of the movie and take action if they have been actively engaged. There hasn't been a screening of this film where I haven't had 40 people come up to me afterward and ask me what they could do. If people come to their own conclusion they will want to become more involved.

NM: How do you frame the story then?

The other thing that allowed me to be even-handed, and this was to the consternation of some of the activists and certainly to the plaintiff's lawyers, who were surprised that it was not more overtly in favor of the lawsuit, is that the film to me is not really about the lawsuit. It is an excuse to tell a larger story. The lawsuit, while I think it's important that there is a lawsuit and it is an historic one because it is the first time indigenous people have brought a foreign company into their own courts to hold them accountable, and it was important to deflate the issue of the for-profit lawsuit right up front instead of hiding from it, but a lawsuit is an inadequate vehicle for addressing humanitarian and environmental issues. We're in year 17 with no end in sight. Even if there is a ruling this winter, as we expect, it will be appealed for another decade. And then try to make them pay. Look at the Exxon Valdez. Everyone agreed that they were in the wrong but it took almost two decades to pay those fines and at the last minute they got a judge to reduce the amount by 80 percent.

The other larger observation of the film is that I am not smart enough to tell you whether Chevron has wrapped itself up in enough legalities, all the legal issues and claims and counter-claims. The jurisdictional issue is interesting, the initial release from the government is an interesting issue. I'm not trained in the law. To me, there's a much larger issue here, and that is the utter immorality about what is done. The law is not about seeking the truth; it is about presenting the best argument. For me, there is no justification for what they did originally. They came into a place where there were six indigenous tribes, and yes, the government had a hand in it, and they set up a system that was designed to pollute. There is no moral justification for that, to use methods that were not permissible in our country. Unlike everyone else, after the arguments are over, they have to go back there to God knows what existence, to that poisoned environment. Another generation will suffer because the lawsuit is taking so long.

Another reason for the stylistic approach is that it is an advocacy film but it is also a portrait of advocacy. The camera pulls back a bit in a self-reflective way and looks at the advocacy movement, what each side has to do to push their agendas forward. Some people asked, "Are you sure you want to show the coaching of the witnesses?" It wasn't about gotcha.

NM: It was about teaching them you have to speak their language.

JB: There's an honesty in that that I think the audience feels and it helps in their engagement to weigh the issues, including to weigh the media and celebrities. It asks why in this country unless there is celebrity attention on a social or humanitarian issue it does not get any media attention? I have enormous regard for Sting and [his wife] Trudie Styler for what they did for this region long before the celebrity photo-op was fashionable, they walk the walk, but the film is critiquing why we need that.

Friday October 9, 2009

Categories: Comedy, Documentary, Movies

Good Hair

Chris Rock's daughter wanted to know why she didn't have "good hair." And so he made this documentary as an answer, exploring the relationship between black women and their hair and hair products and processes -- and how that relationship...

Tuesday October 6, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Documentary, Musical

Anvil: The Story of Anvil

If this story wasn't true, they'd have to invent it. Indeed, they already did. "This is Spinal Tap," one of the most outrageous, influential, and utterly hilarious movies ever made, is a "mockumentary," a fake documentary about a heavy metal...

Thursday October 1, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Movies

Capitalism: A Love Story

Twenty years after his groundbreaking "Roger & Me," documentarian-provocateur Michael Moore returns to some of the same themes with "Capitalism: A Love Story," about the financial meltdown and what it shows about the failures of our financial and political systems....

Thursday September 24, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Movies

The Providence Effect

You often hear the expression "feel-good movie" and it usually refers to a heart-warming romantic comedy or maybe something with penguins. This is a real feel-good movie because it is a real story. A man with a passionate commitment to...

Friday September 11, 2009

Remembering 9/11/01

As we remember the unspeakable losses of September 11, 2001, we also remember the immeasurable gallantry, courage, and devotion it inspired. "Metal of Honor" is a heart-wrenching documentary about the iron workers who arrived as the World Trade Center buildings...

Tuesday September 8, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Documentary, Parenting

Nursery University

Ingredients: 1. Too many toddlers 2. Not enough preschools 3. Parents who will do anything for their children 4. Parents whose top priority is their children's education 5. Parents who recognize the substantial social and educational advantages of the few...

Thursday September 3, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Movies, Music

It Might Get Loud

It goes to 11. Davis Guggenheim ("An Inconvenient Truth") has made a documentary featuring three generations of guitar gods: Jimmy Page (Led Zeppelin), The Edge (U2), and Jack White (The White Stripes). But it is not about the musicians. It...

Monday August 24, 2009

Woodstock

Forty years ago, it seemed for one brief moment as though a disastrous, mud-soaked music festival that attracted so many people it had a larger population than all but one city in the state could be the beginning of a...

Thursday August 20, 2009

X Games 3D: The Movie

Kids, don't try this at home. 3D is X-treme film-making and thus well suited to the X Games, hyper-intense, hyper-dangerous, hyper-what are they thinking? sports that are closer to stunts. Young men compete on skateboard, snowboard, and on dirt bikes...

Saturday August 15, 2009

Chris Rock on 'Good Hair'

This new documentary from Chris Rock about the way African-American women think about what makes "good hair" looks terrific....

Sunday August 2, 2009

Categories: Biography, Documentary, Movies

Yoo-Hoo, Mrs. Goldberg

Gertrude Berg is described in this sympathetic and engaging documentary as an earlier version of Oprah. She wrote every word of over twelve thousand scripts. She played the lead role and oversaw every element of the programs on radio, in...

Monday July 6, 2009

Categories: Biography, Documentary

Remembering Robert McNamera

Former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamera, the architect of the Viet Nam war, died today, still a figure of controversy after nearly half a century. Every family should watch the Oscar-winning documentary The Fog of War for a thought-provoking (and...

Friday July 3, 2009

Gertrude Berg, Television Pioneer

A forthcoming book and documentary about Gertrude Berg tell the story of this pioneering broadcaster, producer, and actress. According to a story in Flow Magazine, Gertrude Berg was the founder of the family situation comedy on radio and television. She...

Thursday July 2, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Interview

Interview: Nati Baratz of 'Unmistaken Child

As they have for hundreds of years, a Buddhist monk goes on a journey in search of the "unmistaken child" who is the reincarnation of his master. The quest is unchanged in its goal and its procedures. But this time...

Tuesday June 30, 2009

Categories: 3D, DVDs, Documentary, Musical

Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience

Jonas Brothers fans will feel like they are on stage with Joe, Nick, and Kevin in this immersive 3D concert film from the recent "Burning Up" tour. Brief backstage glimpses of the JoBros waking up, having breakfast, filming a music...

Monday June 15, 2009

Paperclips

The tragic shooting at the Holocaust Museum in Washington DC last week reminds us yet again of the importance of making sure that future generations do not just learn the statistics but truly understand the near-incomprehensible devastation of genocide and...

Sunday June 14, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Festivals

Silverdocs 2009

Silverdocs is now the biggest documentary film festival in the United States. It opens tomorrow in Silver Spring, Maryland, with an outstanding line-up of documentaries -- old, new, long, short, funny, sad, domestic and international. Some of the highlights include...

Thursday June 4, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Television

Come 'Home' with a One-Time Chance to See An Amazing Documentary

Home is a gorgeous new documentary with a haunting musical score about the planet we live on. It is from internationally renowned French photographer Yann Arthus-Bertrand and produced by award-winning director Luc Besson. HOME is narrated in English by Glenn...

Tuesday May 5, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Movies

Earth

This stunning valentine to our planet's plants and animals re-purposes some of the footage from the stunning documentary Planet Earth into a more narrative storyline, taking us through the seasons and across the globe to see nature's eternal themes of...

Monday May 4, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Music, Television

The Hip Hop Project

Be sure to watch the amazing documentary The Hip Hop Project tonight and see the extraordinary work by Chris "Kazi" Rolle in encouraging young people to tell their stories. He gives kids who feel invisible a chance to own their...

Wednesday April 22, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Lists

List: Earth Day Movies

In addition to last year's recommended Earth Day movies, take a look at these gorgeous documentaries about the creatures with whom we share this great planet: 1. March of the Penguins This worldwide sensation takes us to Antarctica, where these...

Saturday April 18, 2009

Grey Gardens, Act III

What is is about the story of Grey Gardens that has been so enduringly fascinating? They have inspired a documentary film, a Broadway musical, endless articles, even a song by Rufus Wainwright. Some people think it is because the two...

Tuesday April 7, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Documentary

I.O.U.S.A.

Two guys who are super-smart and super-rich, Warren Buffet and Pete Peterson and one guy who is just super-smart, former Comptroller General of the United States David Walker have a message for Americans -- don't spend money you don't have....

Sunday March 22, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Movies

Robert Blecker Wants Me Dead

Robert Blecker is one of the most outspoken -- and unexpected -- proponents of the death penalty. He does not try to base his argument on the death penalty as deterrent or to prevent the opportunity for further crimes. The...

Thursday February 26, 2009

Categories: 3D, Documentary, Music, Musical

Jonas Brothers 3D

No review because they didn't show it to critics, but here's a shot from the new Jonas Brothers concert film....

Wednesday February 25, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Interview

Interview: New York Noir

New York Noir is a documentary about the experience and influence of African-Americans in the history and culture of New York City. It will be shown on the Documentary Channel this week and it is available for purchase online. I...

Thursday February 19, 2009

Must Read After My Death

A generation ago the technology first became widely available to allow families to document their lives with home movies and audio recordings. The use of these artifacts has transcended the "can you believe I used to look like that" and...

Tuesday February 17, 2009

Categories: DVDs, Documentary

Religulous

The most important moment in Bill Maher's new documentary about the dangers and hypocrisy of religion is at the conclusion of his visit to a tiny trucker's chapel. As he does throughout the movie Maher challenges the very notion of...

Wednesday February 4, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Shorts

Walking Across America With Just $217

Alex Charwick sits down at a table with two microphones and a sign that says "Interviews 50 Cents" and talks to everyday Americans about their lives. The results are enthralling. In this interview, he talks to an Algerian-American man who...

Monday January 26, 2009

Girls Rock!

As Jack Black explains in School of Rock, rock music is about sticking it to The Man. That takes on a wider meaning when the sticking is coming from young girls. In this documentary about a music camp in Portland,...

Monday January 19, 2009

The History Channel Presents The Presidents

This week we observe one of the great strengths of the system created by the founding fathers, the orderly transition to a new administration. In honor of the outgoing and incoming Presidents of the United States, take a look at...

Saturday January 3, 2009

Interview: Steve James of 'At the Death House Door'

I last wrote about the superb documentary At the Death House Door when I interviewed its subject, Pastor Carroll Pickett, who served 15 years as the death house chaplain to the infamous "Walls" prison unit in Huntsville. The film was...

Friday January 2, 2009

Categories: Documentary, Interview

Interview: The Tustys of 'The Singing Revolution'

Tea thrown overboard. Freeing the prisoners. Knocking over a statue. Every revolution has a moment when the people say that they will no longer tolerate tyranny. In the case of Estonia, the Baltic nation that suffered under two of history's...

Tuesday December 9, 2008

Categories: DVDs, Documentary

Man on Wire

"Beacause it's there." George Mallory's reason for conquering Everest applies to feats of exploration and adventure that include traveling to the moon. This documentary shows us that it also explains how a French teenager leafing through a magazine at his...

Friday October 31, 2008

List: Election Documentaries

In honor of one of the most exciting elections in American history, here is a list of ten classic documentaries about elections and politics. 1. Primary This pioneering political documentary from Robert Drew, the first in a trilogy, shows candidate...

Tuesday October 28, 2008

Please Vote for Me

There is no better way to make elections real to kids than this award-winning documentary about the first-ever election in a third-grade classroom in China. In Please Vote for Me , the children are completely unfamiliar with even the concept...

Thursday October 16, 2008

Creationism vs. Atheism at the Box Office

As the pro-intelligent design film Expelled comes out in DVD this week, the ads crow that it is the top-grossing documentary of the year. But its record has been eclipsed by the anti-religion film Religulous after only two weeks in...

Thursday October 16, 2008

Categories: Documentary, Movies, Sports

Morning Light

This sunny documentary about a sailboat race across the Pacific Ocean is a bit of a throwback to the days when a night at the movies included some cartoons, a newsreel, and a travelogue. It has a lot of postcard-pretty...

Tuesday October 14, 2008

Categories: DVDs, Documentary

Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed

There may be a good argument to make on behalf of teaching Intelligent Design in science class, but this documentary from Ben Stein does not make it. The movie itself is an example of design by faith and emotion rather...

Saturday October 11, 2008

Categories: Documentary

What is Obscene? Arthouse Films Documentary About Obscenity Trials

Arthouse Films, a terrific new company specializing in documentaries about art, has released an important documentary called Obscene: A Portrait of Barney Rossett and Grove Press. As was once said about another film, this one has "something to offend everyone."...

Thursday September 18, 2008

Categories: Documentary, Interview

Interview: Irena Salina of 'FLOW'

Director Irena Salina talked to me about her new documentary, "FLOW: For Love of Water," about the problems of contamination and scarcity in water systems throughout the world. What kind of water do you drink? Tap water! We need to...

Thursday September 11, 2008

Categories: Documentary, Movies

FLOW: For Love of Water

Americans take for granted our most precious and vital resource. We assume that when we turn on the tap, the water that comes out will be perfectly safe and more than plentiful, endless. And then there are those rows and...

Monday September 8, 2008

Apostles of Comedy

Four Christian stand-up comics join forces in this performance film that combines hilarious commentary on all of the absurdities of life with very touching glimpses of the men at home and their fellowship with each other. Anthony Griffith, Brad Stine,...

Saturday July 26, 2008

Lists: Great Sports Documentaries

10. The Heart of the Game A dedicated girls' basketball coach and a talented player with some daunting challenges make this an unforgettable story. 9. 16 Days of Glory Bud Greenspan's documentary series about the Olympics give you a front-row...

Monday July 14, 2008

Mandela

Celebrate the 90th birthday this week of one of history's greatest leaders, Nelson Mandela, with one of the fine films about his extraordinary perseverance, vision, courage, and leadership. The story of the massive social change he achieved without violence is...

Monday June 2, 2008

Women and Spirituality: The Goddess Trilogy

Women & Spirituality is a three-part series about the power of the sacred feminine in mythological, historical and cultural contexts. Part 1, Goddess Remembered, examines goddess-based pre-historic societies, linking the loss of goddess-centered societies to environmental degradation. The second, The...

Tuesday May 27, 2008

Interview: At the Death House Door

At the Death House Door is an extraordinary documentary from the makers of "Hoop Dreams." It is the story of Pastor Carroll Pickett, who served 15 years as the death house chaplain to the infamous "Walls" prison unit in Huntsville....

Monday May 26, 2008

Documentary Therapy: Families Use Cameras to Create Conversations (and Confrontations)

Last week I saw a documentary called Bigger Stronger Faster* (The Side Effects of Being an American). The film, produced by some of the people behind Fahrenheit 9/11 and Bowling for Columbine, ties the use of steroids and other performance-enhancing...

Tuesday April 22, 2008

The Pixar Story: tonight at 10 on STARZ

The most successful movie studio in Hollywood history is Pixar, which created the first computer-animated feature film, Toy Story. Every one of their films has not only made money, but every one has made over $100 million. What is even...

Friday April 18, 2008

Categories: Documentary, Movies, Musical

Young@Heart

In School of Rock Jack Black taught a classroom of 10-year-olds that rock and roll music is always about one thing: Sticking it to The Man. A new documentary about a chorus of performers in their 80's and 90's shows...

Saturday March 22, 2008

Interview with Ilana Trachtman, director of "Praying with Lior"

Ilana Trachtman found the subject of her documentary, "Praying with Lior," at Rosh Hashanah services. Lior has Down syndrome. His devotion to prayer has inspired the members of his close and loving Jewish community in Philadelphia. But the movie is...

Sunday March 9, 2008

Categories: Documentary

Special offer for Public Libraries on Films of Frederick Wiseman

Pioneering documentarian Frederick Wiseman is one of the key developers of what is sometimes called "observational" or "direct" cinema. These days, our concept of documentaries is often shaped by Michael Moore or Al Gore, unabashedly advocacy movies that are more...

Monday December 3, 2007

Categories: DVDs, Documentary, Genre, Movies, Reviews

Arctic Tale

The people behind "March of the Penguins" have put together another endearing story of life in the coldest place on earth. This time, it is the story of two newborns, a polar bear called Nanu and a walrus named Seela....

Wednesday November 7, 2007

Categories: Documentary

How to Cook Your Life

Writer-director Doris Dörrie has made a wonderfully touching and inspiring documentary about zen priest and best-selling cookbook author Edward Espe Brown. It is about food and dignity and touch and mindfulness, sufficiency and abundance, physical, spiritual, and emotional hunger,...

Monday August 20, 2007

Categories: Documentary, Movies

11th Hour

Leonardo DiCaprio has produced a thoughtful, important film about a vitally important subject, the devastating impact of industrial development on the fragile environment. He has assembled an impressive collection of scholars and world leaders to emphasize the precariousness of the...

Sunday June 24, 2007

Categories: Documentary, Movies

Sicko

Presenting symptoms: queasiness, fever, hyperventilation, and mood swings. Diagnosis: You've just seen Michael Moore's latest film, "Sicko." As the tagline says, "This might hurt a little." Moore's record-breaking documentaries have taken on guns (Bowling for Columbine), the war in Iraq...

Friday September 22, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Documentary, Movies

Jackass: Number Two

Anyone unfamiliar with the Jackass collection (a prior feature-length “movie” -– really a collection of skits –- and a series on MTV) will definitely not want to go into the boys’ second film, "Jackass: Number Two" (get it?), without first...

Wednesday May 24, 2006

Categories: Documentary, Movies

An Inconvenient Truth

No zombies. No chain saws. No mutants. No aliens. No meteors hurtling toward Earth. And yet, this is the scariest movie of the year, not, as some jokes suggest, because it is a two-hour Power Point Presentation by famously un-exciting...

Sunday April 2, 2006

The Devil and Daniel Johnston

It's not just that an interview with a rock star while he is in the dentist's chair having his teeth drilled is far from the weirdest thing in this movie. It's more that the whole story is so weird that...

Thursday March 2, 2006

Categories: Comedy, Documentary, Movies, Musical

Block Party

The regal Erykah Badu takes the stage, her slender form topped with an enormous puff of hair that hangs down over her face. But the stage is outdoors on a gusty, rainy day, and all of a sudden it is...

Wednesday March 1, 2006

Categories: Biography, Documentary, Movies

Unknown White Male

Confounded doctors admit that they’ve only seen it in movies and textbooks. But in this documentary a mystery, perhaps the ultimate mystery occurs. A healthy and successful young man wakes up on a train to Coney Island to discover –...

Thursday January 26, 2006

Categories: Documentary, Movies, Shorts

Roving Mars

Imagine standing in Los Angeles, trying to shoot a basketball all the way to New York, where it must hit the basket without touching the hoop. That's the magnitude of the challenge faced by NASA scientists and engineers in trying...

Sunday December 4, 2005

Categories: Documentary, Movies, Sports

First Descent

When the helicopter takes you to the snowy peaks at the end of the paved road, where “backcountry” describes a style and a philosophy as oppose to a location, you know you are about to see something beautiful. As if...

Thursday June 10, 2004

Categories: DVDs, Documentary

America's Heart and Soul

If Norman Rockwell made a movie, this would be it. If "America the Beautiful" was a movie, this would be it. If America had a home move, this would be it. And if we ever needed a reminder of of...

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