Documentaries seen in 2024
Documentaries seen in 2024
List your 2024 documentary film watches here.
A big wish is to see the new Wiseman this year, the one about the workings in and around the kitchen of that world-famous restaurant in France, Menus-Plaisirs - Les Troisgros.
A big wish is to see the new Wiseman this year, the one about the workings in and around the kitchen of that world-famous restaurant in France, Menus-Plaisirs - Les Troisgros.
Gods of Tennis ep 3 Navratilova/Evert (Draper, 2023) 8/10
The third and final installment of a wonderful UK series on the huge tennis personalities that defined the 1970s and 80s that are now considered legends.
The first ep centred mostly on Jimmy Connors and Arthur Ashe, the first man of colour to ever win Wimbledon, and all the issues he faced because of his ethnicity. Also Billie Jean King and her assertive personality which rubbed the media and society up the wrong way, because women tennis players were supposed to be pretty and feminine and just shut up and never complain, right? The second ep focused mostly on the Bjorn Borg/John McEnroe rivalry. And this third and final ep concentrates on Martina Navratilova's and Chris Evert's careers, very often with them facing each other off in the big Grand Slam finals.
It was very moving at times, as Navratilova had the world against her for being unattractive, for being so "foreign", and for not being feminine enough and so obviously gay and out, though the media never openly mentioned this. Martina's loss in her first showing in a singles final match at the US Open Championships where, when she loses, the crowd gives her a huge and extended, 5 minute long super loud applause to let her know she was loved and accepted, and Martina openly cries and is overwhelmed with gratitude for the love and warmth the crowd is giving, will melt even the hardest of hearts. It's a truly moving moment, and yes, I cried too.
Some very good excerpts from great matches, this series was a wonderful time capsule, too. Recent interviews with all these gods of 1970s and 80s tennis (except for Arthur Ashe, who sadly died in the 1990s) are also wonderful and really shine a light on how they felt and what they were up against in those times. 9/10 for the series as a whole. LOVED IT!
Australia's Open S1 ep2 (Baré, 2023) 7
About the last 40 years of this Grand Slam tennis event mixed with the sometimes embarrassing recent history of Australia, with its racism and homophobia.
**I come from a nutty tennis-loving family, so both these tv series were right up my alley, but I think anyone would find them good, especially Gods of Tennis, so if anyone would like to see them too, just drop me a PM here.**
British Legends of Stage and Screen: Ian McKellen (Fabian, 2012) 7
Jerry Brown: The Disruptor [PBS American Masters] (Zenovich, 2022) 6
I probably would've gotten more out of this if I'd grown up in America. It's a positive portrait of a maverick politician who had a lot of integrity (compared to 99.9% of politicians of today, of course!).
The third and final installment of a wonderful UK series on the huge tennis personalities that defined the 1970s and 80s that are now considered legends.
The first ep centred mostly on Jimmy Connors and Arthur Ashe, the first man of colour to ever win Wimbledon, and all the issues he faced because of his ethnicity. Also Billie Jean King and her assertive personality which rubbed the media and society up the wrong way, because women tennis players were supposed to be pretty and feminine and just shut up and never complain, right? The second ep focused mostly on the Bjorn Borg/John McEnroe rivalry. And this third and final ep concentrates on Martina Navratilova's and Chris Evert's careers, very often with them facing each other off in the big Grand Slam finals.
It was very moving at times, as Navratilova had the world against her for being unattractive, for being so "foreign", and for not being feminine enough and so obviously gay and out, though the media never openly mentioned this. Martina's loss in her first showing in a singles final match at the US Open Championships where, when she loses, the crowd gives her a huge and extended, 5 minute long super loud applause to let her know she was loved and accepted, and Martina openly cries and is overwhelmed with gratitude for the love and warmth the crowd is giving, will melt even the hardest of hearts. It's a truly moving moment, and yes, I cried too.
Some very good excerpts from great matches, this series was a wonderful time capsule, too. Recent interviews with all these gods of 1970s and 80s tennis (except for Arthur Ashe, who sadly died in the 1990s) are also wonderful and really shine a light on how they felt and what they were up against in those times. 9/10 for the series as a whole. LOVED IT!
Australia's Open S1 ep2 (Baré, 2023) 7
About the last 40 years of this Grand Slam tennis event mixed with the sometimes embarrassing recent history of Australia, with its racism and homophobia.
**I come from a nutty tennis-loving family, so both these tv series were right up my alley, but I think anyone would find them good, especially Gods of Tennis, so if anyone would like to see them too, just drop me a PM here.**
British Legends of Stage and Screen: Ian McKellen (Fabian, 2012) 7
Jerry Brown: The Disruptor [PBS American Masters] (Zenovich, 2022) 6
I probably would've gotten more out of this if I'd grown up in America. It's a positive portrait of a maverick politician who had a lot of integrity (compared to 99.9% of politicians of today, of course!).
I went to a screening of a bunch of the short films by Tom Palazzolo at the Siskel Film Center and he came to do the introduction and answer questions.
He graduated at the School of the Art Institute back in 1965 and came back to teach film there in the eighties. He's 87 now but still very sharp. It was quite a time capsule of all kinds of different stuff.
It hadn't occurred to me that the Film Boards were still operating before 1968 which meant if your film wanted to be shown anywhere it had to be reviewed by this panel of politically connected ladies. If they turned it down for any reason you could go to make an appeal by a panel of lawyers representing the Chicago Archdiocese. So nudity was evidently a sticking point.
He also shot inside the Museum of the Art Institute and I was aware of the fact that students had access to go in to draw or paint in the museum but I asked him directly as to whether he'd gotten permission somehow? He promptly replied-"no". He had to do it all in secret using a series of lookouts to inform him when the guards would leave the room so he could film the various pieces he chose to capture for some sequences which I found hilarious. Especially knowing that he not only went to the school but also taught there. Evidently, they were not nearly as concerned then or now.
Here's the titles that he screened in the original 16mm prints;
'The Bride Stripped Bare' (1967) 14m
This was covering all of the pomp and circumstance for the unveiling of the Picasso Sculpture that resides in Daley Plaza.
'Ricky & Rocky' (1972) 14m
A young couples surprise Bridal Shower held in a back yard on a warm summer's day. It holds all of the charms and fashion that the Hill's had in 'Goodfellas' The Italian groom with his Polish Bride. Ironically, the marriage doesn't last. You can find this one on YouTube but the print is nothing close to the one I saw which was as vivid as anything you can see in Technicolor.
'Love It, Leave It' (1973) 14m
Quoting Mayor Daley when he spoke of those who would protest against those fighting in Vietnam. This was also inner-cut with footage shot at "Nude World" in Indiana which included both contests representing each state for Mister Nude AND Miss Nude America. There's also a voiceover track that included the descriptions of various new vehicles on display at the Chicago Auto Show which fit perfectly along with the curves and shapes of the people displaying themselves on the runway. A weird and yet funny picture.
'Jerry's Deli' (1974) 9m
This one is by far one of those quintessential pieces of history for Chicago. A guy running a sandwich shop who having served throughout WWII is anything but a calm and collective character. His persona is manic and dictatorial to such a degree that he gets all kinds of responses to his behavior.
Also can be found on YouTube
'Marquette Park II (1978) 36m Can also be found online at Mediaburn.org
The history of racism in Illinois is a long and painful one but this was one of those moments that could have been spoofed by Fred Armisen and Bill Hader had they chose to do so. It's not nearly as significant to anyone outside of Chicago today but he happened to be capture one of the oddest moments where a small band of nazis decided to take a shot at gaining some attention by holding a rally in a park. More people turned out to take them apart than of the numbers of racist members of the KKK who came over to I guess support the hate?
There's also footage of many members of the journalists of the day when he gets pushed back into the media area. There's nothing stranger than seeing how people of the media respond to being filmed when they don't know it. There's also a very angry young man who appears briefly who would later become a member of the Obama Administration and then a Mayor of Chicago who was among the protestors.
This is called Marquette Park II because MP I (1976) was him covering the nazis going to protest the Civil Rights Marchers who marched through the then very White European Neighborhood.
This was filmed by two different filmmakers and the other who was blonde haired and blue eyed got invited to do the coverage inside the Rockwell Hall (aka the National Socialist Clubhouse) Only he didn't have his filter for shooting outside when he was using Tungsten film so all of the footage outside and en route to the rally with them primarily washed out. It's the only real flaw that couldn't be helped but the naive and dopey hate group was very short lived.
The leader would be kicked out once it was discovered that his father was a jew who was murdered at the Dachua Concentration Camp and turned over to the police when it turned out he was also a pedophile. (How bad do you have to be when the nazis turn you in?) Once he got out of jail he would remake himself as a new age author who has written many made up historical books that all elude to a pre-historical realm of where white Europeans predated all other ethnicities.
He graduated at the School of the Art Institute back in 1965 and came back to teach film there in the eighties. He's 87 now but still very sharp. It was quite a time capsule of all kinds of different stuff.
It hadn't occurred to me that the Film Boards were still operating before 1968 which meant if your film wanted to be shown anywhere it had to be reviewed by this panel of politically connected ladies. If they turned it down for any reason you could go to make an appeal by a panel of lawyers representing the Chicago Archdiocese. So nudity was evidently a sticking point.
He also shot inside the Museum of the Art Institute and I was aware of the fact that students had access to go in to draw or paint in the museum but I asked him directly as to whether he'd gotten permission somehow? He promptly replied-"no". He had to do it all in secret using a series of lookouts to inform him when the guards would leave the room so he could film the various pieces he chose to capture for some sequences which I found hilarious. Especially knowing that he not only went to the school but also taught there. Evidently, they were not nearly as concerned then or now.
Here's the titles that he screened in the original 16mm prints;
'The Bride Stripped Bare' (1967) 14m
This was covering all of the pomp and circumstance for the unveiling of the Picasso Sculpture that resides in Daley Plaza.
'Ricky & Rocky' (1972) 14m
A young couples surprise Bridal Shower held in a back yard on a warm summer's day. It holds all of the charms and fashion that the Hill's had in 'Goodfellas' The Italian groom with his Polish Bride. Ironically, the marriage doesn't last. You can find this one on YouTube but the print is nothing close to the one I saw which was as vivid as anything you can see in Technicolor.
'Love It, Leave It' (1973) 14m
Quoting Mayor Daley when he spoke of those who would protest against those fighting in Vietnam. This was also inner-cut with footage shot at "Nude World" in Indiana which included both contests representing each state for Mister Nude AND Miss Nude America. There's also a voiceover track that included the descriptions of various new vehicles on display at the Chicago Auto Show which fit perfectly along with the curves and shapes of the people displaying themselves on the runway. A weird and yet funny picture.
'Jerry's Deli' (1974) 9m
This one is by far one of those quintessential pieces of history for Chicago. A guy running a sandwich shop who having served throughout WWII is anything but a calm and collective character. His persona is manic and dictatorial to such a degree that he gets all kinds of responses to his behavior.
Also can be found on YouTube
'Marquette Park II (1978) 36m Can also be found online at Mediaburn.org
The history of racism in Illinois is a long and painful one but this was one of those moments that could have been spoofed by Fred Armisen and Bill Hader had they chose to do so. It's not nearly as significant to anyone outside of Chicago today but he happened to be capture one of the oddest moments where a small band of nazis decided to take a shot at gaining some attention by holding a rally in a park. More people turned out to take them apart than of the numbers of racist members of the KKK who came over to I guess support the hate?
There's also footage of many members of the journalists of the day when he gets pushed back into the media area. There's nothing stranger than seeing how people of the media respond to being filmed when they don't know it. There's also a very angry young man who appears briefly who would later become a member of the Obama Administration and then a Mayor of Chicago who was among the protestors.
This is called Marquette Park II because MP I (1976) was him covering the nazis going to protest the Civil Rights Marchers who marched through the then very White European Neighborhood.
This was filmed by two different filmmakers and the other who was blonde haired and blue eyed got invited to do the coverage inside the Rockwell Hall (aka the National Socialist Clubhouse) Only he didn't have his filter for shooting outside when he was using Tungsten film so all of the footage outside and en route to the rally with them primarily washed out. It's the only real flaw that couldn't be helped but the naive and dopey hate group was very short lived.
The leader would be kicked out once it was discovered that his father was a jew who was murdered at the Dachua Concentration Camp and turned over to the police when it turned out he was also a pedophile. (How bad do you have to be when the nazis turn you in?) Once he got out of jail he would remake himself as a new age author who has written many made up historical books that all elude to a pre-historical realm of where white Europeans predated all other ethnicities.
emile de antonio - point of order (1964) and underground (1976)
see roy cohn in action and you'll get a very good idea of trump's legal strategy. i thought congress was a mess now but guess what it's always been ridiculous
the weather underground were fugitives when they were interviewed in 1976 and the film explores a very fascinating period of US history where left wing terrorism was a thing. one of their many bombings was at the capitol building in 1970 - however no one was injured as they always called ahead to ensure evacuation. they weren't trying to hang anyone
btw trump admitted yesterday the events of january 6th were an insurrection! caused by nancy pelosi i'm so tired
see roy cohn in action and you'll get a very good idea of trump's legal strategy. i thought congress was a mess now but guess what it's always been ridiculous
the weather underground were fugitives when they were interviewed in 1976 and the film explores a very fascinating period of US history where left wing terrorism was a thing. one of their many bombings was at the capitol building in 1970 - however no one was injured as they always called ahead to ensure evacuation. they weren't trying to hang anyone
btw trump admitted yesterday the events of january 6th were an insurrection! caused by nancy pelosi i'm so tired
These sound great. At least I'll be able to see the one about the sandwich-stall despot on youtube.
I found this one as well. https://mediaburn.org/video/marquette-park-ii on another site.
Aw gee! you're the best! ty!cinesmith wrote: ↑Mon Feb 12, 2024 2:08 pm
I found this one as well. https://mediaburn.org/video/marquette-park-ii on another site.
Since I last posted to this thread:
Comizi d'amore (Pasolini,1964) 7.5/10
Strokes of Genius (Douglas, 2018) 8
Freddie Mercury - The Final Act (Rogan, 2021) 7
Little Richard: King and Queen of Rock 'n' Roll PBS American Masters (House, 2023) 7.5
Monochrome: Black, White & Blue ep1 (Brewer, 2017) 7
Dick Johnson is Dead (Johnson, 2020) 7
Classic Albums: Lou Reed "Transformer" (Smeaton, 2001) 7
Hopper: An American love story PBS American Masters (Grabsky, 2022) 7
Dick Cavett: Woody Allen, Ruth Gordon (Barnhizer, 1969) 6.5
Classic Albums: Elvis Presley "Elvis Presley" (Marre, 2002) 8
Being Mary Tyler Moore (Adolphus, 2023) 7
Louis Theroux: America's Medicated Kids (Horan, 2010) 7
Liza With a Z (Fosse, 1972) 8
Louis Theroux: Dark States 1 - Heroin Town (Child, 2017) 8
P.S. Burn This Letter Please (Tiexiera, Seligman, 2020) 6.8
ABBA - Against the Odds (Rogan, 2024) 7.5
Are You Being Served? Secrets and Scandals (Staples, 2022) 6.5
STEVE! Part 1 (Neville, 2023) 7
STEVE! Part 2 (Neville, 2023) 7.5
Spermworld (Oppenheim, 2024) 5.8
Louis Theroux: Dark States 2 - Trafficking Sex (Pickup, 2017) 8
Princess Margaret: The Rebel Royal ep2 (Berryman, 2018) 6.5
Barry Humphries at the BBC (Catt, 2023) 6.5
Brats (McCarthy, 2024) 7
Navalny (Roher, 2022) 7
Sr. (Smith, 2022) 8
Fire of Love (Dosa, 2022) 8
Hoop Dreams (James, 1994) 6.5
All That Breathes (Sen, 2022) 9
Louis Theroux: Dark States 3 - Murder in Milwaukee (Massot, 2017) 7
Descendant (Brown, 2022) 7
Comizi d'amore (Pasolini,1964) 7.5/10
Strokes of Genius (Douglas, 2018) 8
Freddie Mercury - The Final Act (Rogan, 2021) 7
Little Richard: King and Queen of Rock 'n' Roll PBS American Masters (House, 2023) 7.5
Monochrome: Black, White & Blue ep1 (Brewer, 2017) 7
Dick Johnson is Dead (Johnson, 2020) 7
Classic Albums: Lou Reed "Transformer" (Smeaton, 2001) 7
Hopper: An American love story PBS American Masters (Grabsky, 2022) 7
Dick Cavett: Woody Allen, Ruth Gordon (Barnhizer, 1969) 6.5
Classic Albums: Elvis Presley "Elvis Presley" (Marre, 2002) 8
Being Mary Tyler Moore (Adolphus, 2023) 7
Louis Theroux: America's Medicated Kids (Horan, 2010) 7
Liza With a Z (Fosse, 1972) 8
Louis Theroux: Dark States 1 - Heroin Town (Child, 2017) 8
P.S. Burn This Letter Please (Tiexiera, Seligman, 2020) 6.8
ABBA - Against the Odds (Rogan, 2024) 7.5
Are You Being Served? Secrets and Scandals (Staples, 2022) 6.5
STEVE! Part 1 (Neville, 2023) 7
STEVE! Part 2 (Neville, 2023) 7.5
Spermworld (Oppenheim, 2024) 5.8
Louis Theroux: Dark States 2 - Trafficking Sex (Pickup, 2017) 8
Princess Margaret: The Rebel Royal ep2 (Berryman, 2018) 6.5
Barry Humphries at the BBC (Catt, 2023) 6.5
Brats (McCarthy, 2024) 7
Navalny (Roher, 2022) 7
Sr. (Smith, 2022) 8
Fire of Love (Dosa, 2022) 8
Hoop Dreams (James, 1994) 6.5
All That Breathes (Sen, 2022) 9
Louis Theroux: Dark States 3 - Murder in Milwaukee (Massot, 2017) 7
Descendant (Brown, 2022) 7
Forgot to post here, so a long list of all the documentaries seen in 2024 so far:
All ratings out of 10
Faro Document (Ingmar Bergman, 1970) 7
News from a Personal War (Kátia Lund, João Moreira Salles, 1999) 8
The Last Lions (Dereck Joubert, 2011) 8
The Machine Which Makes Everything Disappear (Tinatin Gurchiani, 2013) 6 (rewatch)
They Are We (Emma Christopher, 2014) 6
Kedi (Ceyda Torun, 2016) 7
What Was Ours (Mat Hames, 2016) 6
Hissein Habré, A Chadian Tragedy (Mahamat-Saleh Haroun, 2016) 7
This Is Congo (Daniel McCabe, 2017) 7
Jaha's Promise (Patrick Farrelly, Kate O'Callaghan, 2017) 8
Talking About Trees (Suhaib Gasmelbari, 2019) 7
The Jump (Giedrė Žickytė, 2020) 8
She Chef (Melanie Liebheit, Gereon Wetzel, 2022) 7
Clint Eastwood: The Last Legend (Clélia Cohen, 2022) 6
Nothing Compares (Kathryn Ferguson, 2022) 8 (rewatch)
Johnny Depp: The Love of the Bizarre (Régis Brochier, 2022) 7
Denzel Washington – An American Model (Sonia Dauger, 2022) 6
Brad Pitt: More Than a Pretty Face (Thibaut Sève, Adrien Dénouette, 2022) 7
Antonio Banderas and Pedro Almodovar: From Desire to Double (Nathalie Labarthe, 2022) 8
Vika (Agnieszka Zwiefka, 2023) 6
Four Daughters (Kaouther Ben Hania, 2023) 7
The Mother of All Lies (Asmae El Moudi, 2023) 3
Nicole Kidman: Eyes Wide Open (Peter Boudet, 2023) 7
Helen Mirren - Queen of Actresses (Nicolas Maupied, 2023) 7
The Fondas: A Cinematic Dynasty (Charles-Antoine de Rouvre, 2023) 6
Jonas #17 (Martynas Starkus, 2024) 5 (not yet on IMDb)
Martin Scorsese, The Italian-American Master (Camille Juza, Yal Sadat, 2024) 6
All ratings out of 10
Faro Document (Ingmar Bergman, 1970) 7
News from a Personal War (Kátia Lund, João Moreira Salles, 1999) 8
The Last Lions (Dereck Joubert, 2011) 8
The Machine Which Makes Everything Disappear (Tinatin Gurchiani, 2013) 6 (rewatch)
They Are We (Emma Christopher, 2014) 6
Kedi (Ceyda Torun, 2016) 7
What Was Ours (Mat Hames, 2016) 6
Hissein Habré, A Chadian Tragedy (Mahamat-Saleh Haroun, 2016) 7
This Is Congo (Daniel McCabe, 2017) 7
Jaha's Promise (Patrick Farrelly, Kate O'Callaghan, 2017) 8
Talking About Trees (Suhaib Gasmelbari, 2019) 7
The Jump (Giedrė Žickytė, 2020) 8
She Chef (Melanie Liebheit, Gereon Wetzel, 2022) 7
Clint Eastwood: The Last Legend (Clélia Cohen, 2022) 6
Nothing Compares (Kathryn Ferguson, 2022) 8 (rewatch)
Johnny Depp: The Love of the Bizarre (Régis Brochier, 2022) 7
Denzel Washington – An American Model (Sonia Dauger, 2022) 6
Brad Pitt: More Than a Pretty Face (Thibaut Sève, Adrien Dénouette, 2022) 7
Antonio Banderas and Pedro Almodovar: From Desire to Double (Nathalie Labarthe, 2022) 8
Vika (Agnieszka Zwiefka, 2023) 6
Four Daughters (Kaouther Ben Hania, 2023) 7
The Mother of All Lies (Asmae El Moudi, 2023) 3
Nicole Kidman: Eyes Wide Open (Peter Boudet, 2023) 7
Helen Mirren - Queen of Actresses (Nicolas Maupied, 2023) 7
The Fondas: A Cinematic Dynasty (Charles-Antoine de Rouvre, 2023) 6
Jonas #17 (Martynas Starkus, 2024) 5 (not yet on IMDb)
Martin Scorsese, The Italian-American Master (Camille Juza, Yal Sadat, 2024) 6
Active Measures (2018 Jack Bryan)
Jerry's (1974 Tom Palazzolo) ♥
Bride Unveiled (1967 Tom Palazzolo)
Ricky and Rocky (1972 Tom Palazzolo)
Marquette Park II (1978 Tom Palazzolo)
HyperNormalisation (2016 Adam Curtis)
And Everything Is Going Fine (2010 Stephen Soderbergh) rerun (worthy for Spalding Gray fans)
Nose (2021 Clément Beauvais)
The Pine Barrens (2018 David Scott Kessler)
Pine Mud (2020 Jared Flasher)
The Program: Cons, Cults and Kidnapping (2024 Katherine Kubler) Netflix
Muscles & Mayhem: An Unauthorized Story of American Gladiators (2023 Jared Hess) Netflix
Into the Deep: The Submarine Murder Case (2020 Emma Sullivan) Netflix * this started as a doc ABOUT the sub project!
Murdaugh Murders: A Southern Scandal (2023 Julia Willoughby Nason) Netflix
Lover, Stalker, Killer (2024 Sam Hobkinson) Netflix
The Barkley Marathons: The Race That Eats Its Young (2014 Annika Iltis, Timothy James Kane) ♥ ♥
The Antisocial Network: Memes to Mayhem (2024 Giorgio Angelini, Arthur Jones) Netflix
Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich (2020 Lisa Bryant) Netflix
Istintobrass (2013 Massimiliano Zanin)
How to Rob a Bank (2024 Stephen Robert Morse, Seth Porges) Netflix ♥
Dancing for the Devil: The 7M TikTok Cult (2024 Derek Doneen) Netflix
Ashley Madison: Sex, Lies & Scandal (2024 Jon Hutton, Gagan Rehill, Toby Paton) Netflix
Mutiny in Heaven: The Birthday Party (2023 Ian White)
Brats (2024 Andrew McCarthy)
The Pigeon Tunnel (2023 Errol Morris) ♥
Harley & Katya (2022 Selina Miles) Netflix
The Bloody Hundredth (2024 Mark Herzog, Laurent Bouzereau) Netflix
Black Holes: The Edge of All We Know (2020 Peter Galison) ♥
What Jennifer Did (2024 Jenny Popplewel) Netflix
Unknown: Cosmic Time Machine (2023 Shai Gal) Netflix
The Devil on Trial (2023 Chris Holt) Netflix
JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass (2021 Oliver Stone)
An American Bombing: The Road to April 19th (2024 Marc Levin)
Nazis at Nuremberg: The Lost Testimony (2022 Liz Reph) Nat Geo
Squaring the Circle (The Story of Hipgnosis) (2024 Anton Corbijn)
They Called Him Mostly Harmless (2024 Patricia E. Gillespie)
Filling in the Blanks (2023 Jon Baime)
The Commandant's Shadow (2024 Daniela Völker) *this would be the companion piece to Glazer's 'Zone of Interest'
Shackleton: The Greatest Story of Survival (2023 Bobbi Hansel, Caspar Mazzotti) ♥ *if you want to see evidence of climate change...
Murder in a Teacup (2024 Matt Blyth) BBC
Ukraine: Enemy in the Woods (2024 Jamie Roberts)
Carol Doda Topless at the Condor (2023 Marlo McKenzie, Jonathan Parker)
They Shot the Piano Player (2023 Fernando Trueba, Javier Mariscal)
Nightclubbing: The Birth of Punk Rock in NYC (2022 Danny Garcia)
Hawking: Can You Hear Me? (2021 Oliver Twinch)
Beastie Boys Story (2020 Spike Jonze)
American Murder: Laci Peterson (2024 Skye Borgman)
The Missing Tourist (2018 Geoff Morrison)
1980 New Mexico State Penitentiary Prison Riot (BBC) (1982 (?) Jonathan Stamp) ♥
REALLY horrific stuff. Having not known about this particular event. It's very shocking
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3M-hPpuAqwQ
Jerry's (1974 Tom Palazzolo) ♥
Bride Unveiled (1967 Tom Palazzolo)
Ricky and Rocky (1972 Tom Palazzolo)
Marquette Park II (1978 Tom Palazzolo)
HyperNormalisation (2016 Adam Curtis)
And Everything Is Going Fine (2010 Stephen Soderbergh) rerun (worthy for Spalding Gray fans)
Nose (2021 Clément Beauvais)
The Pine Barrens (2018 David Scott Kessler)
Pine Mud (2020 Jared Flasher)
The Program: Cons, Cults and Kidnapping (2024 Katherine Kubler) Netflix
Muscles & Mayhem: An Unauthorized Story of American Gladiators (2023 Jared Hess) Netflix
Into the Deep: The Submarine Murder Case (2020 Emma Sullivan) Netflix * this started as a doc ABOUT the sub project!
Murdaugh Murders: A Southern Scandal (2023 Julia Willoughby Nason) Netflix
Lover, Stalker, Killer (2024 Sam Hobkinson) Netflix
The Barkley Marathons: The Race That Eats Its Young (2014 Annika Iltis, Timothy James Kane) ♥ ♥
The Antisocial Network: Memes to Mayhem (2024 Giorgio Angelini, Arthur Jones) Netflix
Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich (2020 Lisa Bryant) Netflix
Istintobrass (2013 Massimiliano Zanin)
How to Rob a Bank (2024 Stephen Robert Morse, Seth Porges) Netflix ♥
Dancing for the Devil: The 7M TikTok Cult (2024 Derek Doneen) Netflix
Ashley Madison: Sex, Lies & Scandal (2024 Jon Hutton, Gagan Rehill, Toby Paton) Netflix
Mutiny in Heaven: The Birthday Party (2023 Ian White)
Brats (2024 Andrew McCarthy)
The Pigeon Tunnel (2023 Errol Morris) ♥
Harley & Katya (2022 Selina Miles) Netflix
The Bloody Hundredth (2024 Mark Herzog, Laurent Bouzereau) Netflix
Black Holes: The Edge of All We Know (2020 Peter Galison) ♥
What Jennifer Did (2024 Jenny Popplewel) Netflix
Unknown: Cosmic Time Machine (2023 Shai Gal) Netflix
The Devil on Trial (2023 Chris Holt) Netflix
JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass (2021 Oliver Stone)
An American Bombing: The Road to April 19th (2024 Marc Levin)
Nazis at Nuremberg: The Lost Testimony (2022 Liz Reph) Nat Geo
Squaring the Circle (The Story of Hipgnosis) (2024 Anton Corbijn)
They Called Him Mostly Harmless (2024 Patricia E. Gillespie)
Filling in the Blanks (2023 Jon Baime)
The Commandant's Shadow (2024 Daniela Völker) *this would be the companion piece to Glazer's 'Zone of Interest'
Shackleton: The Greatest Story of Survival (2023 Bobbi Hansel, Caspar Mazzotti) ♥ *if you want to see evidence of climate change...
Murder in a Teacup (2024 Matt Blyth) BBC
Ukraine: Enemy in the Woods (2024 Jamie Roberts)
Carol Doda Topless at the Condor (2023 Marlo McKenzie, Jonathan Parker)
They Shot the Piano Player (2023 Fernando Trueba, Javier Mariscal)
Nightclubbing: The Birth of Punk Rock in NYC (2022 Danny Garcia)
Hawking: Can You Hear Me? (2021 Oliver Twinch)
Beastie Boys Story (2020 Spike Jonze)
American Murder: Laci Peterson (2024 Skye Borgman)
The Missing Tourist (2018 Geoff Morrison)
1980 New Mexico State Penitentiary Prison Riot (BBC) (1982 (?) Jonathan Stamp) ♥
REALLY horrific stuff. Having not known about this particular event. It's very shocking
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3M-hPpuAqwQ
Seen since my last post here in August:
All About Abigail's Party (Briscoe, 2007) 7.5/10
The Fog of War (Morris, 2003) 7
Made in Sheffield (Wood, 2002) 7
Classic Albums - Fleetwood Mac "Rumours" (Heffernan, 1997) 7
A Decade Under the Influence - The 70's Films That Changed Everything (Demme, LaGravenese, 2003) 7.5
Making the Shining (Kubrick, 1980) 7
Barry Humphries - The Last Laugh (Deagle, 2023) 7
The Disappearance of Shere Hite (Newnham, 2023) 7.5
Federer - Twelve Final Days (Kapadia, Sabia, 2024) 7
Arena: John Cassavetes (Geller, 1989) 6
Mike Leigh: Making Plays (Yentob (prod), 1982) 6
The Story of Film: An Odyssey - ep4 The Arrival of Sound (Cousins, 2011) 7
The Story of Film: An Odyssey - ep5 Post-War Cinema (Cousins, 2011) 7
The Story of Film: An Odyssey - ep7 European New Wave (Cousins, 2011) 7
The Story of Film: An Odyssey - ep6 Sex & Melodrama (Cousins, 2011) 7
Marianne and Leonard - Words of Love (Broomfield, 2019) 8.5
The Story of Film: An Odyssey - ep8 New Directors, New Form (Cousins, 2011) 7
All About Abigail's Party (Briscoe, 2007) 7.5/10
The Fog of War (Morris, 2003) 7
Made in Sheffield (Wood, 2002) 7
Classic Albums - Fleetwood Mac "Rumours" (Heffernan, 1997) 7
A Decade Under the Influence - The 70's Films That Changed Everything (Demme, LaGravenese, 2003) 7.5
Making the Shining (Kubrick, 1980) 7
Barry Humphries - The Last Laugh (Deagle, 2023) 7
The Disappearance of Shere Hite (Newnham, 2023) 7.5
Federer - Twelve Final Days (Kapadia, Sabia, 2024) 7
Arena: John Cassavetes (Geller, 1989) 6
Mike Leigh: Making Plays (Yentob (prod), 1982) 6
The Story of Film: An Odyssey - ep4 The Arrival of Sound (Cousins, 2011) 7
The Story of Film: An Odyssey - ep5 Post-War Cinema (Cousins, 2011) 7
The Story of Film: An Odyssey - ep7 European New Wave (Cousins, 2011) 7
The Story of Film: An Odyssey - ep6 Sex & Melodrama (Cousins, 2011) 7
Marianne and Leonard - Words of Love (Broomfield, 2019) 8.5
The Story of Film: An Odyssey - ep8 New Directors, New Form (Cousins, 2011) 7
hey yall i watched a short documentary about segregation, 'the children were watching,' leacock 1961
these people don't really change. they surrounded the black family's house screaming. horrible
these people don't really change. they surrounded the black family's house screaming. horrible