Reviews - Page 59

Giving you our points of view on the latest docs in release and on the circuit.

Magaluf Ghost Town Review: Documenting Debauchery

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In the past decade, online videos and tabloid photos of binge-drinking Brits getting β€œmortal” during their Easter and summer breaks in Spain have made having fun look alarmingly like the aftermath of a war. Too often, we see half-naked unconscious bodies lying on the streets in the sun and ever popular viral videos of public sex games while also reading annual reports of injuries and deaths of drunks attempting to balcony dive into swimming pools. The resort town of Magaluf (slangily called β€œShagaluf”), on the island of Majorca off Spain’s east coast, has been struggling to reform its sleazy image,

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La Madrina Review: A Survivor’s Savage Story

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Some characters lead lives that demand to be celebrated and commemorated on film and Lorine Padilla, is surely one of them. The Puerto Rican-American β€œMadrina” (Godmother) of Raquel Cepeda’s La Madrina: The Savage Life of Lorine Padilla (winner of the audience award at last year’s DOC NYC festival), has led a complicated life: A former β€œFirst Lady” of The Savage Skulls gang, a spiritual counsellor, abuse survivor and spirited community activist, who is now in her sixties, she recounts her battles with frankness and salty insight. From the start, Padilla seems to have been built for drama. As a child,

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Tiny Tim: King for a Day Review – A Different Drummer

The list of one-hit wonders in music contains artists with many popular songs. Lou Bega got audiences shaking with β€œMambo No. 5” and Donna Lewis dethroned Celine Dion from the top of the charts with β€œI Love You Always Forever” before fading into obscurity. Perhaps second only to Vanilla Ice in the world of one-hit wonders, however, is Tiny Tim. The eccentric man with the signature falsetto is immortalized in his nasally pitched hit β€œTip Toe Through the Tulips.” Tiny Tim: King for a Day profiles the late artist to celebrate his uniqueness and eccentricity. The doc is a quirky

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Kenny Scharf: When Worlds Collide Review – Pop’s Art

If Boomer nostalgia music docs were the rage of 2018, 2019, and 2020, then New York street artist bios are the doc fad of 2021. On the heels of Martha: A Picture Story and Wojnarowicz: Fuck You Faggot Fucker comes Kenny Scharf: When Worlds Collide. It’s a rollicking portrait of the NYC pop artist. The doc is cut from the cloth of poppy profile docs, although any bleary-eyed doc fan trying to keep pace with the truly insane volume of film releases these days could easily mistake it for the other two. Martha Cooper and her photography actually appear in

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Chinatown Rising Review: Housing Problems and Community Advocates

The recent shooting in Atlanta, Georgia that claimed the lives of eight people at a spa has brought renewed attention to anti-Asian racism. These acts, which range from micro-aggressions to violent hate crimes, are not newβ€”they were sadly normalised by the previous White House administration amid the coronavirus pandemic. Despite the long overdue racial reckoning inspired in response to the murder of George Floyd and ensuring resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement last summer, attention to the systemic discrimination that Asian-Americans and Asian-Canadians face has been relatively muted until nowβ€”even since the tragic events of March. The history of

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Nomadland Review: The Drama of the Open Road

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Much of ChloΓ© Zhao’s Nomadland simply observes actress Frances McDormand as Fern, a woman travelling the USA in search of seasonal work, in conversation with fellow nomads. These mobile-home-dwelling workers, or β€œworkampers” as they call themselves, are not professional actors like McDormand. They’re genuine workampers enacting the drama of their lives. Their stories inform the book Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century by Jessica Bruder, on which Zhao bases her film. Workampers like Linda May and Charlotte Swankie tell their stories in Nomadland once again, but this time to McDormand. The two-time Oscar winning actress delivers a masterfully understated

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The Last Villains Review: Doc Pulls No Punches

Paul Vachon is the surviving member of a Canadian dynasty. He’s the reigning king of the ring. The octogenarian recalls his family history in The Last Villains. The story mostly centres on the fame that Vachon enjoyed with his brother, Maurice, who went by the moniker Mad Dog while Paul cut up the crowd as The Butcher. Directed by Thomas Rinfret, The Last Villains is an engaging character study that should appeal beyond die-hard wrestling fans. Vachon is a good storyteller and retains the showmanship of his wrestling years. He captivates a viewer while telling a story complete with twists

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Francesco Review: A New Pope

Pope Francis must have a good publicist. His roller coaster numbers seem to be improving despite the dwindling interest in the Catholic Church. Perhaps because the Church’s outdated manner seems more irrelevant when its leader professes himself progressive, the Vatican needs to repair its image with more than a wing and a prayer. The papal comms team is in full swing. For example, there’s a new pope movie every year since Argentine Jorge Mario Bergoglio became Pope Francis. However, there are few installments in the Papal Cinematic Universe prior to his leadership. In franchise terms, this is a pope reboot.

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