By Thomas White and Tamara Krinsky In this turbo-charged era, it is possible to get nostalgic for something that happened just a week ago. So, we present one last look back at that ten-day extravangaza in the snow. When we last left off, at the mid-point, Tamara Krinsky, through her day job as reporter/producer at iklipz, was furnishing us with dispatches from various parties where the docu-faithful flocked,; Sarah Jo Marks had filed one blog, then got busy with the film she's repping, The Fighting Cholitas, which went to earn an honorable mention in the shorts category; and I, Tom White, had
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Alan Berliner in his studio in the middle of the night, from his film Wide Awake, which airs on HBO. Courtesy of Alan Berliner Some people count sheep. Others meditate; some medicate. Alan Berliner has tried all three strategies and many more to fall asleep. In 2004, he began Wide Awake, which uses his personal battle with insomnia as a way into not only the nature and need for sleep (and the ramifications of the lack thereof), but also into the nature of his own creativity and productivity. Infusing the film with this dynamic psychological component is Berliner's own tortured relationship to
Making the case for the arts in our Nation's Capitol.
Despite growing up in Germany, I only discovered Werner Herzog relatively late. While I was aware of his work from early on, Lessons of Darkness was really the first Herzog film I ever watched. Now, having seen many of his other films, Lessons of Darkness--while not necessarily my all-time favorite Herzog film--still sticks in my mind as it so vividly introduced me to his particular brand of storytelling and approach to truth and fiction. Herzog directed Lessons of Darkness in 1991. Working in collaboration with the British cinematographer and co-producer Paul Berriff, he traveled to Kuwait to
Any filmmaker who sets out to make a documentary faces multiple challenges, not the least of which is a set of ethical issues inherent in the process. How to portray the subjects of the film? What to shoot and what not to shoot? How to edit so that the film is true to its topic and subjects, yet also works as a compelling story for the audiences? If a filmmaker is working in a foreign country or culture (or subculture), how to represent people with dignity and sensitivity to that place, time and experience? Most people not involved in filmmaking are not entirely aware of the power of the
Ribbon of Sand premiered in March at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History
Daniel Gold and Judith Helfand's 'Everything's Cool'
The making of 'The Girl Next Door'
Films Transit International, the respected documentary international sales company, celebrates its 25th anniversary this year. The company has made a name for itself marketing and releasing high-profile theatrical and television documentaries that focus on arts, culture, societal issues and politics. Timely and distinct, their titles include, among others, Cowboy del Amour; Manufacturing Dissent; My Country, My Country; China Blue; The Corporation; American Hardcore; Metallica: Some Kind of Monster, Crumb and The Celluloid Closet. Documentary chatted with Films Transit founder Jan Rofekamp by