Showing posts with label BEST DOCUMENTARY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BEST DOCUMENTARY. Show all posts

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Best Documentary Short-List

Fifteen movies move forward to compete for the Best Documentary Oscar.




  • Art & Craft (directed by Sam Cullman, Jennifer Grausman, Mark Becker)
  • The Case Against 8 (directed by Ben Cotner, Ryan White)
  • Citizen Koch (directed by Carl Deal, Tia Lessin)
  • Citizenfour (directed by Laura Poitras)
  • Finding Vivian Maier (directed by John Maloof, Charlie Siskel)
  • The Internet's Own Boy (directed by Brian Knappenberger)
  • Jodorowsky's Dune (directed by Frank Pavich)
  • Keep on Keepin' On (directed by Alan Hicks)
  • The Kill Team (directed by Dan Krauss)
  • Last Days of Vietnam (directed by Rory Kennedy)
  • Life Itself (directed by Steve James)
  • The Overnighters (directed by Jesse Moss)
  • The Salt of the Earth (directed by Juliano Ribeiro Salgado, Wim Wenders)
  • Tales of the Grim Sleeper (directed by Nick Broomfield)
  • Virunga (directed by Orlando von Einsiedel)

Monday, December 1, 2014

PGA: Docs and Televison Nominations

The Producers Guild of America announced a partial list of nominations.  The big one for Best Picture will be announced on January 5, 2015.

BEST DOCUMENTARY
  • The Green Prince
  • Life Itself
  • Merchants of Doubt
  • Particle Fever
  • Virunga 
NORMAN FELTON AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING PRODUCER OF EPISODIC DRAMA
  • Breaking Bad
  • Downton Abbey
  • Game of Thrones
  • House of Cards
  • True Detective

DANNY THOMAS AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING PRODUCER OF EPISODIC COMEDY
  • The Big Bang Theory
  • Louie
  • Modern Family
  • Orange is the New Black
  • Veep

PRODUCER OF NON-FICTION TELEVISION
  • 30 For 30
  • American Masters
  • Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown
  • Cosmos: A Space Time Odyssey
  • Shark Tank

PRODUCER OF LIVE ENTERTAINMENT/TALK
  • The Colbert Report
  • Jimmy Kimmel Live
  • Last Week Tonight with John Oliver
  • Real Time with Bill Mahar
  • The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon

PRODUCER OF SPORTS PROGRAM
  • 24/7
  • Hard Knocks: Training Camp with The Atlanta Falcons
  • Hard Knocks: Training Camp with The Cincinnati Bengals
  • Inside: U.S. Soccer's March to Brazil
  • Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel

PRODUCER OF CHILDREN'S PROGRAM
  • Dora the Explorer
  • Sesame Street
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
  • Toy Story of Terror
  • Wynton Marsalis: A YoungArts Masterclass

PRODUCER OF DIGITAL SERIES
  • 30 For 30 Shorts
  • Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee
  • Cosmos: A National Geographic Deeper Dive
  • Epic Rap Battles of History
  • Video Game High School Season 3              

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Documentary Shortlist

15 documentaries advance to Oscar:


  • 20 Feet From Stardom- directed by Morgan Neville
  • The Act of Killing- directed by Joshua Oppenheimer
  • The Armstrong Lie- directed by Alex Gibney
  • Blackfish- directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite
  • The Crash Reel- directed by Lucy Walker
  • Cutie & the Boxer- directed by Zachary Heinzerling
  • Dirty Wars- directed by Rick Rowley
  • First Cousin Once Removed- directed by Alan Berliner
  • God Loves Uganda- directed by Roger Ross Williams
  • Life According to Sam- directed by Sean Fine & Andrea Nix
  • Pussy Riot: A Punk Prayer- directed by Mike Lerner & Maxim Pozdorovkin
  • The Square- directed by Jehane Noujaim
  • Stories We Tell- directed by Sarah Polley
  • Tim's Vermeer- directed by Teller 
  • Which Way Is the Front Line From Here? The Life & Time of Tim Hetherington- directed by Sebastian Junger

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

PGA: Best Documentary Nominations

The Producers Guild Association of America presents its picks for Best Documentary of 2013:

We Steal Secrets, the other movie about Wiki-Leaks is a PGA documentary nominee

  • A Place at the Table- Kristi Jacobson & Lori Silverbush
  • Far Out Isn't Far Enough: The Tomi Ungerer Story- Brad Bernstein
  • Life According to Sam- Sean Fine & Andrea Nix
  • We Steal Secrets: The Story of Wiki-Leaks- Alex Gibney
  • Which Way Is the Front Line From Here? The Life & Time of Tim Hetherington- Sebastian Junger

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Cinema Eye Nominations

Cinema Eye, alongside the IDA, honor the best in documentary features.  The Act of Killing and Stories We Tell appear at this juncture to be two of the most acclaimed of the year.  Musings and Stuff heartily approves of Sarah Polley's wonderful intimate portrait.

BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
The Act of Killing
After Tiller
Cutie & the Boxer
Leviathan
Stories We Tell

BEST DIRECTOR
Joshua Oppenheimer, The Act of Killing
Martha Shane & Lana Wilson, After Tiller
Lucien Castaing-Taylor & Véréna Paravel, Leviathan
Tinatin Gurchiani, The Machine Which Makes Everything Disappear
Sarah Polley, Stories We Tell 

BEST DIRECTOR
Janus Billeskov Jansen, The Act of Killing
Alain Berliner, First Cousin Once Removed
Nels Bangerter, Let the Fire Burn
Lucien Castaing-Taylor and Véréna Paravel, Leviathan
Francisco Bello, Our Nixon

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

IDA Documentary Awards Nominations

The 2013 International Documentary Association are:


The Act of Killing- directed by Joshua Oppenheimer
Blackfish- Gabriela Cowperthwaite
Let the Fire Burn- directed by Jason Osder
Stories We Tell- directed by Sarah Polley (review)
The Square- directed by Jehane Noujaim

full list here.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

PGA- Best Documentary

This year might be a boom for documentary features with a great many films that are not just provocative, or good enough, or popular enough to be in contention for the top award.  Of course, this year comes with a major rule change that makes it that much more difficult.  Now with guidelines dictating a theatrical release and review in either major newspaper New York Times and\or Los Angeles Times, it seems to favor the populist ones over anything else.  However in 2012, such wide-ranging films like Bully, The Queen of Versailles, Jiro Dreams of Sushi, The Invisible War, Central Park Five, How to Survive a Plague as well as the PGA finalists below and few others, this year is a mighty one.  The Producers Guild picks:

  • The Gatekeepers
  • The Island President
  • The Other Dream Team
  • A People Uncounted
  • Searching for Sugar Man

Friday, December 2, 2011

Page One: Inside the New York Times

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences recently released it's shortlist for the films in contention for Best Documentary Feature for this years Oscars.  As is always the case, the first knee-jerk reaction is of what was left out.  There was the art house hit car racing flick Senna, the sensationally fun house that was Errol Morris' Tabloid, and a team of acclaimed Werner Herzog films (Cave of Forgotten Dreams and Into the Abyss) that failed to make the cut.  However, one the of the most glaring and striking omissions was Page One: Inside the New York Times, a fiercely intelligent, thoughtful and relevant tale of the machinations at play covered throughout a calendar year at perhaps the most powerful and important media powerhouses of all time.  Director Andrew Rossi was given unparalleled access during a time when the newspaper industry is most vulnerable, endlessly fearing the fate of a dying industry succumbing to the new and know of modern technological way of attaining and distributing information.  While the hard working men and women at the Times attest to values of responsible journalism indebted to professional accountability and old-school ethics, that fear is prevalent in every shot of this rich, absorbing film.  For an institution that so easily can rest upon its laurels of being the dominant news source not just of the nation, but the world, the high days of the breakthrough of such things as the Pentagon Papers seem like a thing of the past-- the film (and seemingly the Times itself do indeed heed the facts of certain lapse in credibility recently-- both Judith Miller and Jayson Blair are earmarked.)  Yet the film finds the perfect way to lapse those fears and the efforts made by The New York Times to retain not just it's integrity, but reinvent itself during times of upheaval.  There's an avid, impassioned debate between the merits of the old method of receiving and delivering news, and that complicated web that appears now because of powerful online outfits-- one's with sexier tag lines and contemporary media sharks with little interest in valuable information.  The real story is that The New York Times, in an age when many formerly grand newspapers are going under or merely whittling down to irrelevance, is still the most powerful and trendsetting source of news in the world.  Rossi especially chooses to follow the story of David Carr, a colorful and ingratiating media columnist whose backstory consists of drug abuse and single parenting, and it proves entertaining and illuminating, for Carr came to the Times late in life, but spurred on by his verbosity, intelligence and energy proves the venerable institution hasn't lost its way in finding talent, or delivering stories better than anyone else.  And while times are grim for this industry, there's a hopeful narrative in the tale of declining ad sales, sagging subscriptions and layoffs, that the most integral cog in this machine will retain its place on top.  A-

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Best Documentary Feature

Let the kvetching begin with the 15 finalists, of which 5 will be nominated for Best Documentary Feature in this years Oscar race.  The shortlist is:


  • Battle for Brooklyn
  • Bill Cunningham: New York
  • Buck
  • Hell & Back Again
  • If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front
  • Jane's Journey
  • The Loving Story
  • Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory
  • Project Nim
  • Semper Fi: Always Faithful
  • Sing Your Song
  • Undefeated
  • Under Fire: Journalists in Combat
  • We Were Here
As with the case every year, the real story comes at the films snubbed rather than the ones selected.  Of the fifteen, I've viewed Buck, Project Nim and We Were Here, all pickups from Sundance and solid in their own right.  What was passed over is fairly immense, perhaps moreso than usual, including the major box office hit Senna, the Werner Herzog death penalty doc Into the Abyss (his 3-D spring hit Cave of the Forgotten Dreams was actually eligible last year.)  Also snubbed was the New York Times smart doc Page One, the magically absurd Tabloid (from doc royalty Errol Morris), and the critically acclaimed The Interrupters.

As a sidenote-- the Wim Wenders ballet documentary Pina (in 3-D) is also the official German entry for Best Foreign Language Film.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Best Documentary Feature

One thing, I truly believe, that's come about in the past few years what with the American "system" falling apart every which way, is that documentaries have become a richer, angrier, and far more engrossing than ever before.  This may not in fact be true at all, and as I'm far more exposed to current documentaries than the ones of yore, I may not be a proficient judge of any of it.  In any which way, I gladly proclaim that 2010 has been, so far at least, a fairly dynamic year for docs, and that this years Oscar could be a well deserved brawl.


  • Casino Jack & the United States of Money- few watched this enriched, enormously entertaining film from one of the new leaders of genre: Alex Gibney.  Gibney, as evidenced by this work, as well as his 2005's corporate horror flick, Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, is quite a fine filmmaker who on first account appears to have a bit of Michael Moore's showmanship, but underscores it with an unparalleled aptitude for surveying his subjects from the inside out, with a perfectionists, perhaps even fetishists verve.  Here the subject is Jack Abramoff (soon to be portrayed by Kevin Spacey in a narrative feature), the privileged, ultra-conservative lobbyist who bought and sold votes on Congress with his mighty access to cash.  While it might be quick to suggest Casino Jack serves along a same road as many similar anti-Republican docs in recent years, that would be a short sighted argument.  For instance, Gibney is smart enough to surround himself with more red state talking heads than anything else (including deliciously delusional accounts from former House majority leader Tom DeLay, with whom Abramoff was awfully familiar with), and grounds the film with sincere testimony from devout conservatives of Abramoff's past who believed in a grand noble idea for a new America...it would be almost romantic, if it didn't turn out so repugnant.  Apart from that, Casino Jack is grandly entertaining, making difficult and convoluted new-government horrors accessible to the common joe, perhaps unfamiliar with PACs and the like.  Gibney blasts the soundtrack, and even has a nifty voice over reading of Abramoff's past e-mails courtesy to ultra-cool actors like Stanley Tucci and Paul Rudd, he even opens the film with a dramatized murder scene (like he did in Enron.)  Disclaimer there must be that this film, no matter what political property one might buy, will make one angry, and outraged.  Thankfully, Abramoff has his jail cell to consul us.  Oscars chances might be slim, but if it gets seen by enough of the die-hard Academy liberals, it may stand a chance.  A-
      • Waiting for "Superman"- Davis Guggenheim (the Oscar-winning director of An Inconvenient Truth) returns with a withering, quite scathing indictment of American public schools in this well-intentioned, thoughtful, if a bit flawed film.  I have little doubt this one will be shortlisted for Oscar consideration; the promotion for this film has been working overtime since it debut at this year's Sundance Film Festival; that the film comes courtesy of Paramount Pictures, a major motion picture studio won't hurt it's chances either-- the bigger the campaign, the more attention.  Guggenheim hits the right notes here, what with the films plethora of disturbing numbers to make the audience gasp, and the five children he spotlights that make us cry-- emotion mixed with terrifying numbers will always work.  The perplexing problems with the movie is it's over-simplified "answers" to the plaguing schools.  Guggenheim's assumptions are the teachers unions are evil, and charter schools are the key, but the problems bigger than that, both answers are somewhat undermined when facts arise...not all charter schools are great (not that the ones Guggenheim specifically spotlights aren't), and teachers unions, while retain ridiculous specifications, aren't quite the agreeable villain Guggenheim wants them to be.  All that said, it still is a fairly solid film, especially when it's asking the questions, as opposed to answering them: My favorite: "Does a bad neighborhood make a bad school, or does a bad school make a bad neighborhood," (discuss amongst yourselves.)  B+
      • Exit Through the Gift Shop- the funhouse, Banksy documentary that opened last spring that made quite a butt-load of cash, at least for a documentary feature.  Easily the most spirited non-fiction film of the year, meaning the Academy won't touch the thing with a ten-foot pole...they're not a fan of whimsy, especially in this category.  Yet I strongly believe that this clever oddity-- which tackles the exciting, criminal world of graffiti art and evolves into something a whole lot stranger-- has a lot to say about art, and the process of such.  One man's junk could be another man's art, but this film is pure magic.  B+
      • The Tillman Story- the angry doc that explores the mysterious and troubling death of former football player turned army man Pat Tillman opened to nice reviews and decent documentary box office.  That the film comes courtesy of The Weinstein Company may help with an Oscar campaign (if they decide to actually try with it.)  The film is definitely worthy of consideration, but perhaps lacks the artistry of the some of the others this year.  B+
      • Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work- another "fun" documentary; meaning it's a no-no for the Academy, but respect should be bestowed for the honest, warts-and-all account of one of this country's most influential comediennes.  B+
      • A Film Unfinished- a serious awards contender, I'd assume, only because it pertains to Holocaust-- the Academy is big on that subject.  This is a startling and at times heart-wrenching documentary about a propaganda film made in the Warsaw ghetto.  In the titular unfinished film, it showcased "actors" playing the parts of wealthy, healthy Jews, in startling counterpoint to the real-life suffering outside the shots.  I wished the framework and structure of the film had been stronger; if so I could strongly argue I would win this year; as it is I still believe it will be shortlisted.  B-
      • Countdown to Zero- perhaps similar in theme to Waiting for "Superman," in that the subject is totally noble and absolutely admirable, while the artistry is at a minimum, Lucy Walker's nuclear weapons documentary might make onto the Oscar shortlist, but probably would have done better in a weaker year.  B
      • Winnebago Man- a biographical documentary about "the angriest man in the world," one Jack Rebney, a pitchman for the vehicle company, whose profanity-blasted infomercial outtakes made him a cult online celebrity.  Far too "fun" and innocuous for Academy consideration, but an entertaining lark none the less, with an interesting human face commentary on the freaks of the you tube generation.  B


      Now for the documentaries I haven't viewed yet:

      • Inside Job- Charles Ferguson's documentary on the economic crisis, which has earned raves from Cannes, Toronto, Telluride and New York Film Festivals, and must be considered a top Oscar contender.  His past work: the incredible No End in Sight (2007; Oscar nominated) is a must see, and perhaps the best, most cohesive film I've ever seen about Iraq., and he is surely one of our finest documentarians.
      • Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Elliot Spitzer- about the "rise and fall" of NY governor Elliot Spitzer, which has been a film festival favorite all season.  Also directed by Alex Gibney (Casino Jack & the United States of Money, and won the Oscar for 2007's Taxi to the Dark Side.)
      • Restrepo- released this spring, the film which chronicled a year with a platoon in Afghanistan won raves earlier in the year, and also won this years best documentary prize at Sundance.  Directed by Tim Hetherington and Sebastian Junger.
      • Tabloid- Errol Morris (Oscar winner for 2003's The Fog of War) debuted his latest at the Telluride Film Festival to his usual raves, and should never be counted out.  The profundity of his work helped elevate the entire genre, with bold films like A Brief History of Time, Gates of Heaven, and The Thin Blue Line.  His latest deals with a former beauty queen, Joyce McKinney, who in the seventies, abducted a Mormon missionary. 

         Not a snowballs chance in hell:
        •  Catfish
        • I'm Still Here

        Friday, November 20, 2009

        Best Documentary

        The Academy has selected it's semi-finalists to be competing for documentary feature. I've seen one of these films, so my criticism is not all that worthy here I guess. I don't see enough documentaries every year to be a cohesive enthusiast.



        Notably absent are Kirby Dick's incisive critique of closeted senators Outrage (my grade: A-), and Michael Moore's latest opus, Capitalism: A Love Story, thus far the highest grossing documentary of the year, as well as two successful and critically accepted music documentaries-- It Might Get Loud and Anvil: The Story of Anvil!. The finalists are:

        The Beaches of Agnes
        Burma VJ
        The Cove
        Every Little Step
        Facing Ali
        Food, Inc.
        Garbage Dreams
        Living in Emergency: The Stories of Doctors Without Borders
        The Most Dangerous Man in the World: Daniel Ellsberg & the Pentagon Papers
        Mugabe & the White African
        Sergio
        Soundtrack for a Revolution
        Under Our Skin
        Valentino: The Last Emperor
        Which Way Home


        My track records pretty good this year actually-- saw one of them (Every Little Step, about the casting of the revival of A Chorus Line) and have heard of all but three. YAY ME!
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