Coverage of what is truly interesting in the film world

TOP STORY:

True Films

By Dave DeBoer posted 1 year ago
  • del.icio.us
  • Technorati
  • Reddit
  • Ma.gnolia
  • YahooMyWeb
  • StumbleUpon

I’m a bit of a doc junkie, so I was pretty pleased to see that Kevin Kelly (co-founding editor of Wired) has put together reviews of 100 of his favorite documentary films. Better yet, the 56-page book is published in PDF format, so you can download it for $3 (at the Boing Boing Digital Emporium).

On his website, Kevin nicely sums up what I love about docs:

“The very best of these non-fiction films are as entertaining as the best of Hollywood blockbusters. In contrast to the fiction that most movies are, true films offer authentic plot twists, real characters, and truth stranger than fiction. They aim to both entertain and to inform–a powerful combo.”

I think this book will be a great tool to change the minds of people who aren’t quite sold on the idea of enjoying documentaries. And for those who have long loved docs, apparently there’s already been a film club launched around the 100 films reviewed in the book. I’m not sure who organized it, or where, but it sounds like a good idea for Spout doc fans.

I’ll be back with more after I have a chance to look at the book.

Immediate stories

Paul Moore
By Paul Moore posted 2 years ago
  • del.icio.us
  • Technorati
  • Reddit
  • Ma.gnolia
  • YahooMyWeb
  • StumbleUpon

Going to festivals and making a point of seeing first-time filmmakers is a hit or miss game. Finding a real gem from somebody who came out of nowhere is like no other feeling in movie watching. But most of the time I find myself stirring in my seat, listening to line after line of dialogue heavy on information and low on drama. Most of these films fall into a freshman sand trap of simply delivering bulky information to the audience, while relying on tricks to excite people. And when it’s time for the audience to have a revelation, it winds up being a soliloquy that ends with a deep breath and a phrase like, “I guess you’ve got to forget somebody before you can really remember them.” With the accessibility of equipment out there and the diversity of life experience, I’m surprised to see how homogenized the stories that show up at festivals can be.

Ten years ago, Ed Burns was one of these young filmmakers showing She’s the One on the festival circuit. I felt with She’s the One, Burns was way too polished. Now with The Groomsmen, he’s revisited familiar territory and smoothed out the rough edges. In both films he’s simply telling stories from what he knows