Documentary

  • Clarissa Campolina & Luiz Pretti – Enquanto estamos aqui AKA While We Are Here (2019)

    Clarissa Campolina2011-2020BrazilDocumentaryDramaLuiz Pretti

    Synopsis
    Two lives cross in New York. Lamis, a Lebanese woman, has just moved to the city and describes her impressions while the Brazilian man Wilson has already lived there for 10 years. We never see them on the screen, but their relationship is described in poetic Arabic and Portuguese voice-overs, which contrast starkly with the images, shot in New York, Berlin and Brazil. In this way, the film speaks literally to the imagination: the events take place between what we see and what we hear. This hybrid form of documentary, fiction, travelogue and letters makes this ‘film diary’ reminiscent of News from Home (1977) by Chantal Akerman. Whereas Akerman brings together two different worlds based on letters from her mother in Belgium and images of New York, While We Are Here adds macro and geopolitical issues, such as globalisation and migration, to this approach. The main thread remains intimate and human: desire, love, fear and memories.—International Film Festival RotterdamRead More »

  • Luc de Heusch – Michel De Ghelderode (1957)

    Documentary1951-1960BelgiumLuc de HeuschShort Film

    From DVD booklet:
    After Perséphone, his first film which he describes as “an experimental, mythological poem” and shoots under the pseudonym Luc Zangrie, he makes a portrait of playwright Michel de Ghelderode together with his friend Jean Raine. It introduces us to the world of a creator obsessed with and fascinated by death. If biographic references are present, they are only there in order to place the writer in the right setting: nostalgia for Bruges and Flanders, solitary wanders through a backward-looking, legendary Brussels. Ghelderode’s gravelly voice is the leitmotiv of the film, which focuses on rehearsals of his plays at the Théâtre de Poche and with the puppets of the Théâtre Royal de Toone. We accompany him into his study, a place of dreams and fantasy, full of baroque objects that define his world.Read More »

  • Franc Roddam & Paul Watson – The Family (1974)

    Franc Roddam1971-1980DocumentaryPaul WatsonTVUnited Kingdom

    The Family, Paul Watson, 1974

    12 x 30’ – First “fly on the wall” documentary serial.
    Press Critics Prize – National Archive.

    A ‘fly on the wall’ look at the working-class Wilkins family from Reading.

    Modelled on the 13-part observational series, An American Family (US, d. Craig Gilbert, 1972), producer Paul Watson’s 12-part The Family (BBC, 1974) is credited with creating the concept of the ‘fly-on-the-wall’ documentary in Britain. Regardless, Watson’s cinema verité-style, warts-and-all portrait of the working-class Wilkins family certainly popularised an ‘observational’ style still seen as the defining characteristic of British documentary some twenty-five years later.Read More »

  • Isabelle Tollenaere – The Fruit Tree (2022)

    Documentary2021-2030BelgiumIsabelle Tollenaere

    In The Fruit Tree a young woman, Sharleece, wanders through a house that is available to rent in the sleepy desert town where she lives, California City. Looking out of the window evokes unexpected memories of her childhood home in Los Angeles.Read More »

  • Anthony Ing – Jill, Uncredited (2022)

    2021-2030Anthony IngDocumentaryExperimentalUnited Kingdom

    Quote:
    Prolific background actor Jill Goldston takes centre stage in this unique portrait. Constructed entirely from Jill’s performances – captured fleetingly in everything from Mr. Bean to The Elephant Man – the film is a lyrical journey through popular culture, and a haunting study of life lived out of focus.

    As a background artist, Jill Goldston has worked on countless films. This collage of fifty years of cinema and television history is a tribute to her and to all the figures in the background without whom those in the foreground would be unable to take centre stage.Read More »

  • Byambasuren Davaa – Die Geschichte vom weinenden Kamel aka The Story of the Weeping Camel (2003)

    Byambasuren Davaa2001-2010ArthouseDocumentaryMongolia

    When a Mongolian nomadic family’s newest camel colt is rejected by its mother, a musician is needed for a ritual to change her mind.Read More »

  • Stephen Silha & Eric Slade & Dawn Logsdon – Big Joy: The Adventures of James Broughton (2013)

    Stephen Silha2011-2020Dawn LogsdonDocumentaryEric SladeExperimentalQueer Cinema(s)USA

    I learned and stole a lot from James Broughton…
    See this movie!” – Gus Van Sant

    Review (from slackerwood.com)
    James Broughton’s epitaph says about all you need to know about him: Adventure — not predicament.

    For those who want to know more, the splendid documentary Big Joy: The Adventures of James Broughton is a terrific tribute to the revered poet, writer and pioneering experimental filmmaker.

    Born in 1913, Broughton overcame a difficult childhood to have a long, fulfilling career and personal life. His father died when Broughton was five, and his overbearing mother sent him to military school at age 9, hoping to break him of his effeminate tendencies. These experiences no doubt informed his work and his lust for life and love as an adult.Read More »

  • Francesco Carrozzini – Franca: Chaos and Creation (2016)

    Francesco Carrozzini2011-2020DocumentaryItaly

    Synopsis:
    Director Francesco Carrozzini creates an intimate portrait of his mother, Franca Sozzani, the legendary editor-in-chief of Italian Vogue. From the ridiculous to the sublime, her astonishing but often controversial magazine covers have not only broken the rules but have set the high bar for fashion, art and commerce over the past 25 years. From the legendary “Black Issue” and the “Plastic Surgery issue” Sozzani remains deeply committed to exploring subject matter off limits to most in order to shake up the status quo and occasionally redefine the concept of beauty. With interviews from Karl Lagerfeld, Bruce Weber, Baz Luhrmann, Courtney Love and many others, Carrozzini gives us a behind the scenes glimpse into his mother’s creative process as well as peek into her vulnerabilities both past and present. Deeply insightful and often emotional this film is like a love letter from a son to his mother.Read More »

  • David Gregory – Tales of the Uncanny (2020)

    David Gregory2011-2020DocumentaryUSA

    A documentary exploring the subject of horror anthology movies.Read More »

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