In the lobby of an oft-used auditorium at Stanford University, tables sheathed in white cloth and brimming with sandwiches, crudités, hors d'oeuvres
Feature

Preservation & Scholarship Award: Imperial War Museum

The Toronto International Film Festival has become a mighty machine, comparable to Cannes in its power to focus publicity, lend legitimacy and attract

Opening with a visit to a shocking crime scene, then following three murder trials, Two Towns of Jasper examines American race relations from two

IDA Career Achievement Award: Ken Burns

When Renée Tajima-Pena showed up in Detroit in 1983, looking to make Who Killed Vincent Chin? (1988), the award-winning documentary about racial hate

When Lance Loud asked veteran filmmakers Alan and Susan Raymond to make a "final episode" of An American Family, they paused to take in the

Feature Documentaries A Child's Century of War Shelley Saywell, Deborah Parks Films Transit International Amandla! A Revolution in Four Part Harmony

A review of Jeffrey Ruoff's 'An American Family: A Televised Life'

In 1982, shortly after Linda Buzzell founded the IDA, she invited me to run for the board of directors, with the cheerful promise that it would