For one week in February of this year, nearly 1.700 Houstonians and visitors were treated to the First Houston Pan-Cultural Film Festival. sponsored by Ancestral Films, a nonprofit arts organization whose mission is to increase cross-cultural interaction and social awareness through the medium of film. ID's Flora Moon attended the festival and spoke with several key participants. Following are excerpts from her interviews with Ancestral Films Executive Director Mohammed Kamara and documentary filmmaker Vojtech Jasny ( Why Havel?), in the interviewees' own words. Moon's talk with documentary
Latest Posts
Dear Members, By now, many of you have probably read Peter Nichols' recent article in the New York Times, titled "Smile When You Say Documentary." The article is definitely making the rounds in documentary circles—it has been both faxed and e-mailed to me from colleagues across the country. Nichols seems to be pointing out a paradox that we documentary makers, distributors, and exhibitors are already acutely aware of: that while documentaries seem to be enjoying more critical and commercial success of late, they are still perceived to carry a stigma. " Documentary can be a mark of death for a
Television: the household appliance that we love to hate. Children, parents, soap opera addicts, cable network managers, ad execs, reporters, producers, critics, scholars, spin masters, and stars of television all offer frank and revealing observations about their relationships with the tube in Signal to Noise: Life with Television, a documentary miniseries scheduled to air nationally on PBS July 11, 18, and 25. Producer/writer/director Cara Mertes commissioned 21 pieces by 17 independent producers and wove them together with archival footage and interviews to create a richly colored quilt of
In Looking Like the Enemy, a new documentary about the wartime experiences of Japanese American veterans in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam, David Miyoshi describes an incident that happened to him during Marine officer training. As a young officer candidate during the Vietnam War, Miyoshi was ordered to get up on a podium and stand at attention in front of his fellow candidates. A drill instructor told the assembled trainees, "This is what the enemy looks like. Kill it before it kills you." Miyoshi was then told to "growl for me, gook," an order he quickly obeyed. His interpretation of the
For 18 years, Cinema du Réel, the international festival of ethnographic and sociological films, has been revealing the world in all its diversity. Held this year from March 8 to 17 in Paris, the 18th Festival du Cinema du Réel had the same goals with the international competition as well as with a retrospective salute to African cinema. Indeed, African cinema is celebrating its fortieth year of existence as we Europeans are celebrating a century of cinema. The festival opened with a screening of Raymond Depardon last film, Africas: How Is It with the Pain? The international jury, which
For one week in February of this year, nearly 1,700 Houstonians and visitors were treated to the First Houston Pan-Cultural Film Festival, sponsored by Ancestral Films, a nonprofit arts organization whose mission is to increase cross-cultural interaction and social awareness through the medium of film. !D' s Flora Moon attended the festival and spoke with several key participants. Her interviews with Ancestral Films Executive Director Mohammed Kamara and documentary filmmaker Vojtech Jasny ( Why Havel?) will appear in the July/August issue. Following is her interview with documentary filmmaker
Dear Members, The following is the first in a series of dispatches on the state of the documentary from lDA members around the world. News from Russia is reported by Leonid Gurevich, vice president of the Association for Joint Cine-Initiatives (formerly the American-Soviet Kino-initiative). He has written more than 70 documentaries, authored more than 200 articles on film and television, and teaches at Moscow's School of Advanced Screenwriting and Directing. Lisa LeemanIDA President The current state of affairs in Russian documentary film leaves one to hope for the better. The transition to a
Who would have predicted that a seventy-something Iowa farmer—the subject of a documentary made by his daughter, no less—would emerge as one of the stars of the terminally trendy Sundance Film Festival? When filmmaker Jeanne Jordan brought her dad, Russ, up for a question-and-answer session after a screening of Troublesome Creek: A Midwestern, the audience—already enamored of the film—was moved to a standing ovation. Russ, who emerges as a crusty charmer in the verite work, also took the podium at the awards ceremony, when Troublesome Creek achieved the distinction of being the first
Toronto has the most international selection. London has the most eclectic. And Los Angeles has...the most. No, not restaurants. Primetime documentaries. An analysis of one week of evening (7 to 11 p.m.) documentary programming in these three media capitals reveals distinct differences, and for an average viewer in each city (i.e., one without a satellite dish or a subscription to every pay service), richness is a relative term. People who live in Los Angeles have the greatest number of channels from which to choose. In Toronto, with fewer channels, one has al most as many docu mentary hours
Dear Members, The IDA's executive director, Betsy McLane, has been bending my ear about a shocking problem. I'd heard about it for years, but didn't think it was that serious, and I thought someone else was taking care of it. No, I'm not talking about a secret Congressional plot to eliminate all funding for the arts or about a potential new form of digital censorship called the V-chip. I'm talking about film and video preservation. Before your eyes glaze over and you insist that this is a matter for film archivists and Martin Scorsese, please read on. Betsy recently delivered and heard