Advocate (Canada/Israel/Switzerland, 105 min.) Dir. Rachel Leah Jones, Phillipe Bellaiche Programme: Special Presentations (Canadian Premiere) A heroic portrait of an Israeli lawyer who defends violent Palestinian offenders, Advocate is a lively exercise in documentary
Keep ReadingThe Rest (Germany, 78 min.) Dir. Ai Weiwei Programme: Special Presentations (North American Premiere) Ai Weiwei’s 2017 doc Human Flow is one of the most extraordinary portraits of the global migration crisis ever put
Keep ReadingAfghan Cycles (USA, 90 min.) Dir. Sarah Menzies Programme: Silence Breakers Afghan Cycles follows the stories of several young women who train as part of the Women’s National Cycling Team of
Keep ReadingLetter from Massanjia is part docu-thriller and part human rights saga.
Keep ReadingCall Her Ganda (USA, 97 min.) Dir. PJ Raval Programme: World Showcase (International Premiere) The headline at the movies this year might be gender parity and #MeToo, and rightfully so, but
Keep ReadingOn Her Shoulders (USA, 94 min.) Dir. Alexandria Bombach Programme: Special Presentations (International Premiere) Films like On Her Shoulders are awkward to review. When a documentary tackles a subject that is
Keep ReadingThis is Congo (USA, 92 min.) Dir. Daniel McCabe This is Congo will break your heart into pieces. The doc opens with an invigorating handheld shot as the camera follows several
Keep ReadingSeeing Allred (USA, 96 min.) Dir. Sophie Sartain, Roberta Grossman “I don’t think Gloria is in a popularity contest because if she is, she lost that one,” says lawyer and commentator
Keep ReadingFree Lunch Society (Austria/Germany, 95 min.) Dir. Christian Tod With: Gotz Werner (billionaire), Charles Murray (Libertarian), Evelyn Forget (Canadian economist), Emmanuel Saez (French-American economist), Michael Bohmeyer (entrepreneur), Zepahania Kameeta (Namibian Minister), Marshall
Keep ReadingZaatari Djinn (Netherlands, 90 min.) Dir. Catherine van Campen Years ago, in south-western Morocco, I was walking across a wide plain with Mohammed Baidou, a friend who loved telling tourists anything
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