Issue 78 - Summer 2010
With Life with Murder, veteran filmmaker John Kastner investigates a Canadian true crime story of a family torn by violence.
In the Name of the Family and Life with Murder are tragic and terrifying films by John Kastner and Shelley Saywell.
Read MoreThere are some festivals that I have come back to year after year, with pleasure, almost with a feeling of being part of the furniture.
Read MoreCan documentaries break with tradition and become truly avant garde? Mike Hoolboom's Mark and Yuval Sagiv's How I Filmed the War prove it's possible.
Read MoreThe subject of Garry Beitel’s new feature-length doc, The “Socalled” Movie, Dolgin also ain’t no gangsta. Forget bling, bitches and a real sick Lexus.
Read MoreIn the documentary Steam of Life, Joonas Berghäll and his co-director Mika Hotakainen explore a peculiar male vulnerability that swarms the hot box of sixteen different saunas across Finland.
Read MoreThis is not an article about Armageddonstyle disaster movies. It's about how documentary and docweb makers respond to more natural disasters.
Read MorePeter Broderick is a thought leader; a forward thinking strategist, accomplished consultant, sought-after speaker—someone the filmmaking community can count on.
Read MoreSavvy documentary distributors that have stepped up their marketing strategies deserve much of the credit, and so do moviegoers that want more than Hollywood fiction fluff.
Read MoreDOC's policy point person analyzes how TV makes money, even on the internet. Guess who's paying? Filmmakers: read and weep.
Read MoreTahani Rached’s films, in addition to bringing much needed perspectives on contemporary issues, are also timeless in their reach.
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