Next up in our report from Sundance, a look at the latest triumph from Cameraperson director Kirsten Johnson - Dick Johnson Is Dead
Keep ReadingBotero (Canada, 84 min.) Dir. Don Millar The art of Fernando Botero has a peculiar, if distinctive, shape. His paintings, drawings, and sculptures share virtually the same figures and traits. They feature
Keep ReadingMy Father the Spy (Latvia/Germany/Czech Republic/Estonia, 82 min.) Dir. Gints Grube, Jaak Kilmi Don’t even dare blink. My Father the Spy is a wild-but-true tale full of twists, turns, and unexpected revelations. The information
Keep ReadingDads (USA, 87 min.) Dir. Bryce Dallas Howard Programme: TIFF Docs (World Premiere) “Finish this sentence,” director Bryce Dallas Howard instructs her celebrity interviewees. “A dad is…” Dads are a lot of different things
Keep ReadingMax Lewkowicz’s documentary Fiddler: Miracle of Miracles assess the longevity of Fiddler on the Roof as it become more relevant than ever in Trump’s America.
Keep ReadingWhen We Walk (USA, Canada, 79 minutes) Dir. Jason DaSilva Programme: World Showcase (World Premiere) For Jason DaSilva, making When We Walk was an act of desperate love, survival, and confrontation with the abyss.
Keep ReadingBring the biggest box of Kleenex you can find to One Child Nation. This devastatingly powerful film, which won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance this year, is an absorbing, eye-opening, and
Keep ReadingMy Dads, My Moms, and Me (Canada, 85 min.) Dir. Julia Ivanova Programme: Focus On (World Premiere) In 2005, Canada became the first country outside of Europe to legalize same-sex marriage. This
Keep Reading"I don’t regret anything that we did. I know that in any moment, I could have lost my life, my daughter, and my husband," says Waad al-Kateab on her film For Sama,
Keep ReadingI Think You’ve Been Looking for Me (Canada, 44 min.) Dir. Kacim Steets Family is an endless source of inspiration for documentary filmmakers. While these wild-but-true yarns can often be too personal
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