Thursday, February 19, 2026
New ways of seeing: neurodiverse documentaries to watch
“Rubik’s Cube meets Rothko” is how Mark Cousins describes the style of Wilhelmina Barns-Graham (1912-2004), “one of the foremost abstract British artists” (per Wikipedia), though certainly not a household name. It’s an oversight the unconventional documentarian is determined to correct with 2024’s A Sudden Glimpse to Deeper Things. (And enthusiastically so. A rhapsodic monologue about one particular painting ends with the cinephile behind the 15-hour The Story of Film: An Odyssey proclaiming, “David Lynch would love this.”)
To read the rest visit Global Comment.
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Barbara Forever, The Lake, Closure and Other Sundance Docs Still Seeking Distribution
For me, the fun of Sundance—and all festivals—is seeing not the films that everyone is buzzing about pre-fest (I can wait for the streaming release), but discovering the quieter gems that US distributors would do well to take a chance on. While this year’s nonfiction crop was weaker overall than 2025’s exceptional slate—which saw such cinematic revelations as Life After, The Perfect Neighbor and Seeds all competing in the US Documentary Competition—the docs that rose to the top, most notably the handful below, have continued to stay with me long after the final credits rolled in Park City.
To read the rest visit Filmmaker magazine.
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