Bezness as Usual offers an frank study of a contemporary Muslim family as the different generations debate the teachings of Islam.
Keep ReadingRaoul Peck delivers an essential essay on race in America with I Am Not Your Negro.
Keep ReadingMahamat-Saleh Haroun's Hissein Habré, a Chadian Tragedy is a powerful study of healing and closure.
Keep ReadingSunny Leone is more exposed than she’s ever been in Mostly Sunny, Dilip Mehta's portrait of the porn star and activist.
Keep ReadingAcademy Award nominee Hubert Davis returns to the basketball court with the inspiring feature documentary Giants of Africa.
Keep ReadingMorgan Spurlock's Rats is a rare doc that both informs and gets under your skin - a creepy-crawly tale about the insidious creatures.
Keep ReadingSergei Loznitsa's Austerlitz is an immersion in the absence of meaning, becoming a sort of nihilistic totem to the impossibility of understanding.
Keep ReadingWerner Herzog's Into the Inferno is a masterwork filled with stunning visuals and captivating environs as he explores the power of volcanoes.
Keep ReadingWang Bing's Ta'ang is a vivid document of lived experience, but as a feature documentary, it could use a bit more context or inquisitiveness.
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