Long hailed as France’s most famous – and controversial – public intellectual, Bernard-Henri Lévy has been making waves through his writing and speaking (and outsized personality) since his early days in the “Nouveaux Philosophes” movement over four decades ago. In recent years, though, BHL (like RBG he’s a media darling with a hip acronym) has been lauded for turning his penetrating gaze to filmmaking. Just this past November Lévy received the American Media Abroad Award for Peshmerga and The Battle of Mosul, a pair of companion docs he directed that eloquently focus on the Kurdistan region, specifically its people’s importance in the fight against ISIS.
Awhile back I had the good fortune to meet with BHL – who’s currently on a US media blitz hawking his latest book “The Empire and the Five Kings: America’s Abdication and the Fate of the World” – during the Copenhagen International Documentary Festival (also known by its hip acronym CPH:DOX) where both films were screening. Over early morning coffee at the elegant French embassy in the center of town he enthusiastically answered a wide range of questions, beginning with the obvious: Why on earth, after decades of being a Parisian man about town, return to the dangers of covering combat that he dove into during his youth?
To learn the answer to this question and more visit Global Comment.
Tuesday, February 26, 2019
Saturday, February 23, 2019
#OSCARS SO RIGHT: WHY “BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE” IS THE PRIZE TO KEEP AN EYE ON
Recently, Vanity Fair ran a piece declaring the Best Documentary Feature category of the Academy Awards a “haven for female filmmakers.” Indeed it’s true that, as the article stated, just in the past decade “women have directed or co-directed more than half of the nominees for best documentary feature — and four of the winning docs over those nine years have been woman-helmed.” (This compared to the shameful record of the Best Director category – congrats to The Hurt Locker’s Kathryn Bigelow for being the one and only chick to ever nab that prize.) And this latest batch of nominees includes not only RBG, by the female duo Betsy West and Julie Cohen, but also Free Solo, co-directed by Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi with her husband Jimmy Chin.
Surprisingly, what wasn’t stated was something much more obvious to this longtime doc-watcher – that “Best Documentary Feature” is perhaps the most thrillingly diverse Oscars category period.
To find out why read my essay at Hammer to Nail.
Surprisingly, what wasn’t stated was something much more obvious to this longtime doc-watcher – that “Best Documentary Feature” is perhaps the most thrillingly diverse Oscars category period.
To find out why read my essay at Hammer to Nail.
Friday, February 8, 2019
Doc Star of the Month: Walter Burrell, 'The Gospel of Eureka'
Following on the heels of last month’s “Doc Star of the Month,” Ashley York, the lead character and co-director of hillbilly, Documentary is pleased to present for February yet another face of flyover-country diversity. Walter Burrell is the proud owner of a drinking hole in Eureka Springs, Arkansas, that he lovingly refers to as the “hillbilly Studio 54” in Michael Palmieri and Donal Mosher’s The Gospel of Eureka. (And which, though it hosts weekly drag shows, Burrell is quick to point out is not a “gay bar,” since it welcomes everyone regardless of sexuality; he’s staunchly opposed to “gay segregation.”)
Documentary spoke with Burrell about appearing in Palmieri and Mosher’s in-depth exploration of his town, a place where deeply devout Christians (including Burrell himself) and those in the LGBTQ community live together in relative harmony, focusing on their shared common values rather than anything that might drive them apart.
To read my interview visit Documentary magazine.
Documentary spoke with Burrell about appearing in Palmieri and Mosher’s in-depth exploration of his town, a place where deeply devout Christians (including Burrell himself) and those in the LGBTQ community live together in relative harmony, focusing on their shared common values rather than anything that might drive them apart.
To read my interview visit Documentary magazine.
“It’s Like Having a Diary Shot by Someone Else of Moments That You Don’t Remember….”: RaMell Ross on his Oscar-nominated Hale County This Morning, This Evening
Nominated for the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature, and airing on PBS’s Independent Lens beginning February 11th (and now on iTunes), RaMell Ross’s Hale County This Morning, This Evening lives up to its buzz and then some. The award-winning photographer’s debut feature is a low-key, highly cinematic look at the Alabama Black Belt over a period of five years. In that time Ross trained his lens mostly on two twenty-something men, Daniel and Quincy, as they navigated education, blue-collar labor, fatherhood, and just the intricacies of daily life in their culturally rich, economically impoverished Southern town.
Filmmaker was fortunate enough to catch up with Ross, a “25 New Face” of 2015, during this year’s Sundance, where his short Easter Snap celebrated its world premiere.
To read my interview visit Filmmaker magazine.
Filmmaker was fortunate enough to catch up with Ross, a “25 New Face” of 2015, during this year’s Sundance, where his short Easter Snap celebrated its world premiere.
To read my interview visit Filmmaker magazine.
Thursday, February 7, 2019
Ways of Seeing: Images and Politics of 'Hale County'
I first saw Hale County This Morning, This Evening, RaMell Ross’s cinematic look at daily life in the Alabama Black Belt, at last year’s CPH:DOX. It was one of those unexpected festival finds, a film up for the DOX:AWARD, and thus required viewing for us international critics serving on the Danish film magazine Ekko’s annual Starbarometer jury. As I wrote of the doc in my final assessment, “A series of exquisitely framed snapshots alternate with kinetic camerawork, set to an ambient sound design weaved with an elegant score. The poetry of daily life in the rural South is deftly captured through unexpected sounds and intricate specific images.”
That’s a critic’s winded way of saying, “I fell for the film.” So it was quite a thrill to be able to chat with Ross over the phone nearly a year later to get the scoop on his Oscar-nominated debut (the result of a five-year production process that included not only industry heavyweights like Joslyn Barnes and Field of Vision’s Laura Poitras and Charlotte Cook onboard, but even, quite surprisingly, Apichatpong Weerasethakul).
To read my interview visit Documentary magazine.
That’s a critic’s winded way of saying, “I fell for the film.” So it was quite a thrill to be able to chat with Ross over the phone nearly a year later to get the scoop on his Oscar-nominated debut (the result of a five-year production process that included not only industry heavyweights like Joslyn Barnes and Field of Vision’s Laura Poitras and Charlotte Cook onboard, but even, quite surprisingly, Apichatpong Weerasethakul).
To read my interview visit Documentary magazine.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)