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  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    DOCUMENTARY REVIEW: “Civil War (or, Who Do We Think We Are)” forces us to take a probing look at our Civil War history

    The brutal truth about these “United” States of America is that the country was founded on oppression and division, all of which culminated in an often-false rewriting of history.

    Case in point: the Civil War was fought over the right to own slaves. This fact is undebatable. 

    Rachel Boynton’s documentary, “Civil War (or, Who Do We Think We Are) is a relevant and important film about how t

    September 20, 2021
  • News

    DOC PREVIEW: “Rita Moreno, a girl who just decided to go for it”

    Over a long career Rita Moreno defied both her humble upbringing and relentless racism to become a celebrated and beloved actor, one of the rare EGOT (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, Tony) Award Winners of our time. Born into poverty on a Puerto Rican farm, Moreno and her seamstress mother immigrated to New York City when Moreno was five years old. After studying dance and performing on Broadway, Moreno was cast as any ethnic minority

    May 30, 2021
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    FIRST LOOK: “Driving while black: race, space and mobility in America”

    “Driving while black: race, space and mobility in America” is a two-hour documentary film by historian Dr. Gretchen Sorin and Emmy–winning director Ric Burns that will air on PBS this Tuesday.

    Recounting the history and personal experiences—at once liberating and challenging—of black people on the road from the advent of the automobile through the seismic changes

    October 10, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    “All in: the fight for democracy,” directed by Lisa Cortés and Liz Garbus, not only seeks to reveal ongoing voter suppression fraud but also inspire Americans to protect their democracy | REVIEW

    There’s no other way to begin than to say Lisa Cortes and Liz Garbus’s new documentary “All In: The Fight for Democracy” is the most important film of 2020.

    Voter suppression. Let these words sink in. Voter suppression has been in play for hundreds of years. As the film reminds us (or rather, those who need to be reminded), the constitution starts with three words, “We the People.” But who are “the people”? When it was

    October 5, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Interviews, Movies

    The pursuit of self-realization taken to another level: “Rising Phoenix” (PREMIERING ON NETFLIX THIS WEEKEND)

    Thanks to covid-19, both the 2020 Olympics and Paralympics were postponed to 2021. That means the competitors will have another whole year to train and prepare for their events in Tokyo.

    And however disappointing, it’s just one more bump on the road for the Paralympics athletes featured in the new documentary “Rising Phoenix,” which opens on Netflix this weekend. Directed by Ian Bonhôte and Peter

    August 28, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    THREE DOCS REVIEWED: “Desert One,” “Red Penguins” and “Unsettled”

    With the multiplexes shuttered, and the so-called event films on hold for months yet, it’s a boomtime for documentaries, which continue their march onto streaming platforms. Here are a few choice non-fiction flicks to keep an eye out for.

    “Desert One”

    It’s been four decades since Iranian students overran the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, beginning a hostage situation that would only end

    July 19, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    INTERVIEW: Dawn Porter, filmmaker (“John Lewis: Good Trouble”)

    Could there possibly be a more apt time for a documentary about John Lewis, the civil rights pioneer and longtime Georgia congressman? In this singular moment of protest and cultural shift, documentarian Dawn Porter is hoping that her new film “John Lewis: Good Trouble” will be a part of the conversation.

    “Despite some evidence to the contrary, I count myself as an optimistic person. Between the pandemic and all this violence

    July 14, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    AFI Docs | Four documentary films worth noticing

    Filmmakers Sebastian Junger and Nick Quested trace the long, long path of Central American migrants “caravaning” to the United States through treacherous areas of Mexico run by the cartels and narcotraffickers.  This intriguing doc examines the issue from all sides, from the poverty endemic in much of the Americas all the way up to U.S. foreign policy.  Fortunately, the filmmakers give us a few subjects front and center, including a pregnant

    June 21, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies

    AFI Docs | “Belly of the Beast”

    Incredibly, California didn’t rescind its eugenics laws until 1979.  If that weren’t shocking enough, then “Belly of the Beast” will surely raise eyebrows as the doc traces the ugly forced sterilization of incarcerated women in the Golden State.  The doc’s main subject, Kelli Dillon, was incarcerated for defending herself from an abusive husband in a heightened moment that resulted in his death.  While in prison, she developed abdominal

    June 20, 2020
  • Featured Review, In Theaters Now, Movies, This Month's Reviews

    AFI DOCS | 9TO5: THE STORY OF A MOVEMENT

    (during all of this week, Screen Comment’s Eric Althoff gives readers his take on the choicest films from the 2020 crop of AFI Docs, the world’s premier documentary film festival which took place online this year due to the coronavirus) Julia Reichert and Steven Bognar, who won last year’s Oscar for best documentary for their film “American Factory,” are back to shine their cameras on a largely forgotten

    June 19, 2020
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