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Remember CNN when it was born? The networks called it the "Chicken Noodle Network." But it was a revolution that changed news forever. Back then, the
In an effort to encourage documentary makers to screen their works in theaters, the board of governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
In the lobby of an oft-used auditorium at Stanford University, tables sheathed in white cloth and brimming with sandwiches, crudités, hors d'oeuvres
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
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