Hong Kong Moments (Hong Kong/Germany, 90 min.) Dir. Bing Zhou Program: Special Presentations Were you blown away by the mammoth “umbrella demonstrations,” undertaken by pro-democracy forces last year to protest Beijing’s new
Keep ReadingWood (Austria/Germany/Romania, 95 min.) Dir. Monica Lãzurean-Gorgan, Michaela Kirst, Ebba Sinzinger Program: World Showcase James Bond might be on hiatus until November, but cinephiles hankering for a spy game will appreciate Wood. The
Keep ReadingCrip Camp: A Disability Revolution (USA, 104 min.) Dir. James Lebrecht, Nicole Newnham The Obamas had a high bar to meet after American Factory won the Oscar, but Crip Camp grabs it. The film marks the
Keep ReadingYour Turn [Espero tua ( Re )volta] (Brazil, 93 min.) Dir. Eliza Capai If Petra Costa took audiences to the edge of democracy with her Oscar-nominated portrait of Brazilian politics, then Eliza Capai
Keep ReadingIn the Intense Now (No Intenso Agora) (Brazil, 127 min.) Dir. João Moreira Salles When it comes to writing, wordsmiths rely on the advice of William Faulkner, “In writing, you must
Keep ReadingWhose Streets? (USA, 90 min.) Dir. Sabaah Folayan, Damon Davis Whose Streets? is a significant fusion of citizen journalism and documentary filmmaking. Director Sabaah Folayan and co-director Damon Davis provide a
Keep ReadingQuebec filmmaking duo Mathieu Denis and Simon Lavoie create a defiant piece of radical cinema with Those Who Make Revolution Halfway Only Dig Their Own Graves, a rebellious hybrid drama about the
Keep ReadingBrendan Byrne’s Bobby Sands: 66 Days is an extremely effective take on the history and legacy of Sands and his famed hunger strike.
Keep ReadingWinter on Fire captures visceral images from within the thick of a struggle and proves that recording history is a vital political act.
Keep ReadingOccupy: The Movie is a kind of balancing act, and time will tell if its large scope elicits the same impassioned responses Occupy: The Movement did.
Keep Reading