Skip to main content

TV Docs

Famed Cinematographers and Hungarian Emigres Subject of New Documentary
As part of our collection of 25th anniversary essays , Cara Mertes, director of the Sundance Institute's Documentrary Program, writes about the future of documentary storytelling.
Election Night 2005, Antonio Villaraigosa celebrates winning the election to become the first Latino Mayor of Los Angeles in more than 130 years. From
The quest for freedom and the restraints of race are opposing themes that resonate in almost all of Ken Burns' films, from The Civil War to Baseball
It used to be that when you went to see a movie about Mars, you assumed it was science fiction. Tales of the red planet involved little green men
"If this piece of film dies, a human thought dies with it. If I can do something to preserve that thought, isn't it worth doing?" That observation was
While documentary and television aren't the same thing, to the majority of documentary filmmakers in London and the UK, they have become inseparable
With a $1,000 entry ticket, RealScreen Summit—the annual international conference on "the business of factual programming," held in February in
For the last three years, a highlight for documentarians at the Sundance Film Festival has been the House of Docs, a community space designed to