New York Times-produced doc Framing Britney Spears takes a hard look at the pop star’s life, highs, lows, and controversial conservatorship that's fuelling the #FreeBritney movement.
An interview with Academy Award winning director Freida Lee Mock on her Ruth Bader Ginsburg documentary Ruth – Justice Ginsburg in Her Own Words and bringing an American icon's story to the screen.
“I realized how women want to move in a sensual way to reconnect with our bodies, not necessarily just to do pole tricks," says Michèle Ohayon on her Netflix doc Strip Down, Rise Up.
Ashley O’Shay’s Unapologetic is an inspiring ode to Black women activists. Screening at the TIFF Next Wave Festival, it's sure to motivate a new generation of voices to join the fight.
Much of 2020 was shaped by moments captured via cellphone in which police officers were seen leaning on the neck of George Floyd as he gasped for air. This brutal act of violence inspired conversations ranging from surveillance to police brutality and the systemic forces that balance liberty and security. In profound ways that defy
A report from the 50th edition of International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) sees fact and fiction in the balance.
A still from Misha and the Wolves by Sam Hobkinson, an official selection of the World Cinema Documentary Competition at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival. Courtesy of Sundance Institute.
Director Sam Hobkinson discusses his Sundance selection Misha and the Wolves, a too-wild-to-be-true tale about a dirty lie and the art of good telling a good story.
Collective won the Allan King Documentary Award at the 24th annual Toronto Film Critics Association Awards. It was Superbowl Sunday for TFCA members as critics from the Toronto group convened via Zoom for the annual live vote. Directed by Alexander Nanau, Collective is a riveting doc about journalists exploring the story of a nightclub fire