Korean filmmaker and artist Jero Yun’s Mrs. B, a North Korean Woman traces the complicated, dangerous life of its eponymous protagonist.
Keep ReadingHavarie belongs within a broadly defined notion of the essay film genre, and also exhibits a true experimentalism, all while never compromising documentary integrity.
Keep ReadingRaving Iran gets very touching when we see Anoosh and Arash ecstatically releasing themselves and partygoers during the desert rave and, after a big story turn, in Switzerland. They are “floating,” as
Keep ReadingEryk Rocha’s Cinema Novo avoids a pedagogical, talking heads approach to documenting the Brazilian New Wave filmmaking of the 1960s and 1970s.
Keep ReadingThe timing of Jamie Kastner’s feature The Skyjacker’s Tale couldn’t be better. In late 2014, while the Toronto director worked on the movie, the U.S. and Cuba announced the restoration of diplomatic
Keep ReadingQuebec filmmaking duo Mathieu Denis and Simon Lavoie create a defiant piece of radical cinema with Those Who Make Revolution Halfway Only Dig Their Own Graves, a rebellious hybrid drama about the
Keep ReadingJim Jarmusch and Iggy Pop discuss their doc Gimme Danger during a press conference at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival.
Keep ReadingThe Master Plan screenwriter Sanita Jemberga discusses the importance of making the documentary and her views on Russia’s reinvented propaganda machine.
Keep ReadingThe new documentary Out of Fashion shows how Estonian designer Reet Aus has changed the fashion industry for the better.
Keep ReadingIndigenous people get the last laugh in Colonization Road as Anishinaabe comedian and activist Ryan McMahon takes to the streets.
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